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· Reviewed by Aziza Francienne · B2C Marketing Manager
Maple Leaf International School – Wuhan is a large K–12 campus that opened in 2007 and includes an international high school, a Foreign Nationals (off‑shore BC) school (pre‑school to Grade 9), and Chinese national curriculum streams. The campus sits in Wuhan's East Lake High‑Tech Development Area (Optics Valley) and the school website notes landscaped grounds with a small lake and pagoda, a full‑size football pitch, running track, multipurpose gym and an Olympic‑sized ice rink. The school follows the Maple Leaf World School (World School) curriculum for its international pathway, and also runs AP and IGCSE offerings alongside the Chinese national programmes; the Foreign Nationals School is described on the site as a British Columbia (Canada) off‑shore school. The site reports strong progression to Western universities (a high proportion of Grade 12 students move on to overseas study) and lists a wide range of electives and extracurriculars in arts, languages, sport and STEM.
Maple Leaf Building, No. 13, Baolong First Road, Longgang District, Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, China 518116
Maple Leaf Foreign Nationals' School Wuhan has 3,000 pupils, instruction in English, Mandarin.
Maple Leaf's Wuhan campus is in Wuhan's East Lake New Technology Development Zone (Optics Valley), by Tangxun Lake — the campus address is No. 330 Minzu (Minzu Avenue). The site is in the city's high‑tech/education district with local shops and restaurants nearby; public transport (Optics Valley area metro/bus links) serves the general district.
The campus operates multiple sections: kindergarten, elementary, middle school and high school, and it includes a Foreign Nationals (off‑shore BC) school that historically covered K–9; the international high school runs Grade 10–12. The school therefore provides education across a K–12 range on the Wuhan campus.
The campus is an international, non‑religious school operating a range of programs including an international high school and a Foreign Nationals (off‑shore British Columbia) school. Maple Leaf's boarding programme is offered across its campuses generally, but the Foreign Nationals Schools are an exception and do not run the full boarding model.
The school states that student support services and an inclusive learning environment are important pillars of its work, and that teachers provide support and opportunities to meet individual needs; however the public pages do not list detailed, specific SEN provisions. Prospective parents should contact the school's admissions/student‑support team for precise information about assessments, individual education plans or specialist services.
The school is part of Maple Leaf Educational Systems (China) and operates international programmes (including an offshore British Columbia/Canadian programme for the Foreign Nationals School). It is not presented as formally affiliated to a foreign government.
No religious affiliation is stated on the school's public pages; the school presents itself as secular.
The school publishes a detailed school calendar (term dates, exam weeks, early‑dismissal days and events) but does not publish a standard daily timetable (start/end times and specific break/lunch times) on the public pages. For the regular daily schedule (arrival, lesson times, lunch and finish), contact the admissions office or request the parent handbook.
The publicly available English and Chinese pages do not describe a standard daily school‑bus network; the Foreign Nationals School has in the past been described as located about a ten‑minute drive from the main campus, which suggests parents commonly use private transport or arrange transfers. If you need a school bus or daily transport, confirm current arrangements (routes, providers, stops and costs) directly with the admissions office.
Annual tuition at Maple Leaf Foreign Nationals' School Wuhan ranges from RMB 40,000 to RMB 129,000 for 2026/27.
Maple Leaf Foreign Nationals' School Wuhan teaches IB (PYP), Bespoke Curriculum for students aged 4 to 15.
Maple Leaf Foreign Nationals' School Wuhan operates a campus that includes preschool, elementary and middle schools, a K–9 Foreign Nationals School, plus an international high school serving grades 10–12. The grade 10–12 programme follows the Maple Leaf World School Program (MLWSP) and leads to a Maple Leaf World School diploma issued by MLES; the MLWSP is Cognia‑accredited and has been benchmarked by Ecctis as comparable to A‑level, British Columbia and American high‑school standards. Graduation normally requires 25–26 credits (at least 100 hours per credit), typically including 19 English credits, 6 Chinese credits or 6 CSL credits for foreign students, one moral‑education credit, plus elective and online/dual‑credit course options. The curriculum scope covers core subjects (math, sciences, humanities), English academic courses, Chinese language and culture, ESL support and a broad elective programme (arts, business, IT, leadership and AP options at senior levels). Students undertake system assessments and have access to IELTS testing in Grade 12 as part of preparation for Western universities.
The Wuhan campus states it places emphasis on students' personal growth and describes “student support services” and an “inclusive and supportive learning environment” as important pillars of its work. The school also highlights campus values—respect, responsibility, honesty and hard work—and says staff aim to help students develop these attributes. The website notes a broad offering of elective and co‑curricular opportunities that are intended to support students' development. The school page does not, however, publish a clear description of named SEL programmes, dedicated SEL staff (for example an SEL coordinator), or specific classroom‑level SEL curricula for the Wuhan campus. For these reasons, further detail about formal SEL provision at MLFNS‑Wuhan is not publicly disclosed on the school site.
The Maple Leaf Wuhan pages and the MLES program pages reviewed do not provide a public statement of specific Special Educational Needs (SEN) provision, named learning‑support teams, or a list of the types of SEN the campus can support. There is no publicly available information on the Wuhan site identifying specialist SEN staff, an individualised learning‑support policy, or designation as a specialist SEN institution. Because those details are not published on the school's Wuhan or central MLES pages, the school does not publicly disclose its SEN provision for the Wuhan campus. If you would like, I can contact the school admissions office for official clarification.
Maple Leaf Educational Systems publishes an extensive ESL programme that it applies across its schools: Maple Leaf English materials, graded ESL levels and assessments (Foundations, Bridging, etc.) are described and the system states elementary/middle students study substantial weekly English classes with a high proportion taught by native speakers. The central MLES ESL pages explain the Foundations and Bridging pathways and the Maple Leaf English Level Test (MELT) benchmarks used to place students for MLWSP study. The Wuhan campus page also explicitly says the school places emphasis on developing students' English language skills as part of its mission. Those central ESL pages and the Wuhan campus page together indicate the school operates structured, graded English support for learners.
The Wuhan campus website refers generally to “student support services” and notes campus health facilities as part of its infrastructure, but it does not publish a detailed mental‑health or counselling programme for the Wuhan campus. Maple Leaf's North America pages (company‑wide) state that some Maple Leaf schools provide on‑site staff offering personal and career counselling, which shows the organisation has used counselling roles in some regions, but the Wuhan pages do not list named counsellors or a published mental‑wellbeing policy for that campus. Therefore, specific information about on‑site mental‑health staff, referral pathways, or formal wellbeing programmes at MLFNS‑Wuhan is not publicly disclosed on the Wuhan or central MLES pages. If you want, I can request this information from the school's admissions contact.
The school website publishes corporate governance items such as an Anti‑fraud System Policy and a Whistleblowing Policy, but the Wuhan campus pages do not publish a specific child‑protection or safeguarding policy for that campus. The Wuhan page affirms general values and a supportive learning environment, but it does not provide a named safeguarding lead, a published child‑protection policy text, or procedures for reporting concerns on the public site. Because a campus‑specific safeguarding/child‑protection policy is not publicly available on the Wuhan or central MLES pages, the school does not publicly disclose detailed safeguarding arrangements for MLFNS‑Wuhan on its website.
1. Initial enquiry and consultation — Contact the admissions office by email or phone to start. Parents should ask which programme they are applying to (Foreign Nationals School/MLWSP/Chinese curriculum) because the required assessments and fee levels differ by programme. Language support for initial enquiries is available in several languages; if you need an interpreter, mention this at first contact.
2. Submit the application and required documents — Complete the school application (available from the admissions office or downloadable) and submit it with the standard documents: student passport, student birth certificate, parent/guardian passport (signed), latest school transcripts (with English or Chinese translations if needed), any graduation certificates, two passport photos and the non‑refundable application fee. The MLES admissions page lists a US$100 non‑refundable application fee for international student applications; confirm the current fee with the admissions office because published fees can change. Parents should prepare certified translations where necessary and check passport expiry dates before applying.
3. Application evaluation and entrance testing — After document submission the school evaluates academic history and (depending on the applicant's background) administers entrance tests. Students from non‑English speaking backgrounds will usually be tested in English, Chinese and Mathematics; students from English‑speaking backgrounds are typically assessed in Chinese and Mathematics with their academic record reviewed by the MLWSP principal or designate. Parents should ask what specific test format (written/online/interview) will be used for their child's year level and whether any sample or preparation materials are available.
4. Admission decision and programme placement — If the student is admissible the school issues an acceptance and places the student in the appropriate programme (for high school, options include Foundations, Bridging, or Full Grade 10 subject to principal approval). For Foreign Nationals Schools and for Chinese/elementary & middle programmes, successful applicants may be placed in a CSL (Chinese as a Second Language) intensive year course if required. Parents should confirm the offered placement in writing, review any programme start dates, and ask about English‑support/ESL options if their child will need extra language help.
5. Fees, payment and visa paperwork (GW202) — The school requires full payment of tuition fees before it issues the GW202 form needed to apply for a student visa; parents should plan this payment timing into their visa schedule. Ask the admissions team for an itemised invoice (which should show tuition, dormitory if applicable, and other mandatory fees) and for the school's accepted payment methods, refund policy and any deadlines. Because published fee tables the school provides can be dated, confirm the current, school‑specific fee schedule for your child's grade and whether any additional fees (uniforms, laptops, trips, meals) are charged separately.
6. Arrival, document authentication and medical checks — On arrival the school will require the acceptance letter, birth certificate notarized and authenticated by a Chinese consulate/embassy (where required), notarized guardian documents if the student will be living with a guardian, plus the foreigner medical examination performed by the local Entry‑Exit Inspection and Quarantine Bureau. Parents should confirm which documents need consular authentication in their home country well before travel and check the quarantine‑bureau medical appointment process since it is part of visa/registration. Keep originals and several certified copies of all documents; the school will need evidence of tuition payment as well.
7. Registration and first day of classes — After arrival and completion of the registration steps the student is registered with the school and can begin classes. The school publishes semester application deadlines (example dates shown are Fall semester: August 22 and Spring semester: February 27 on the admissions page); families planning to start in the fall or spring should work backwards from those dates to allow time for testing, payments and visa processing. If you have schedule constraints (late arrival, short‑term placement) discuss these with admissions early — some programmes require a minimum enrolment duration.
The school's official admissions pages do not describe a formal public waitlist, and third‑party school directories indicate that a waiting list is not currently in use for the Foreign Nationals School – Wuhan. That said, demand and available places can change by year and by grade; some families report that popular year levels may reach capacity and the school may handle overflow informally (for example by offering later start dates, CSL intake options, or placing applicants on an internal list). If you are concerned about space, ask admissions whether they maintain an internal priority list, how they notify families if space opens, and whether there are recommended timing windows to improve the chance of immediate placement.