The SABIS Educational System Explained
The SABIS Educational System is one of the most distinctive and structured approaches to education in the international school market. Founded in 1886, SABIS has over 135 years of educational heritage and operates a network of schools across the Middle East, North Africa, Europe, Asia, and the Americas. For teachers considering a SABIS position, understanding the system is essential — SABIS schools operate differently from other international schools, and the fit is not for everyone. This guide provides an honest, detailed overview of how the SABIS system works, what makes it unique, and what teachers need to know before applying.
Core Philosophy
SABIS is built on the belief that every student can learn when given the right system and support. Unlike progressive or inquiry-based approaches, SABIS uses a highly structured, content-driven methodology where curriculum, assessment, and pedagogy are standardised across all schools in the network. Teachers deliver prescribed content using SABIS-developed materials and follow a detailed pacing guide that ensures consistency across all SABIS schools globally.
This standardisation is SABIS’s defining characteristic. It means that a Year 8 Mathematics lesson in a SABIS school in Dubai covers the same content, at the same pace, as the equivalent lesson in a SABIS school in Lebanon, Egypt, or Germany. For SABIS, consistency ensures quality — no school falls behind, and teachers are supported by a proven framework rather than left to create everything independently.
The SABIS Point System
The SABIS Point System is the network’s proprietary assessment and tracking mechanism. Students take regular assessments (AMS — Academic Monitoring System exams) that generate data on individual and class performance. Teachers are expected to respond to this data — reteaching content where students have not achieved mastery and adjusting their approach based on performance metrics. The Point System creates accountability for both students and teachers, and performance data is tracked centrally by SABIS management. See our SABIS Point System guide.
Student Life Organisation (SLO)
SABIS schools feature a Student Life Organisation — a student-run body that manages aspects of school life including peer tutoring, discipline, and activities. The SLO gives students leadership responsibilities and creates a structured student community. Teachers interact with the SLO system as part of their pastoral role, and the peer-tutoring element means senior students actively support younger learners in and outside the classroom.
What SABIS Expects from Teachers
| Expectation | Detail |
|---|---|
| Curriculum delivery | Follow SABIS curriculum and pacing guides exactly |
| Assessment | Administer AMS exams and use data to inform teaching |
| Lesson preparation | Use SABIS-provided materials (minimal independent resource creation) |
| Weekly testing | Regular periodic exams are central to the system |
| Data responsiveness | Reteach content where student performance is below target |
| Professional conduct | Dress code, punctuality, and structured professional standards |
Is SABIS Right for You?
SABIS suits teachers who prefer structure over autonomy, are comfortable delivering prescribed content, enjoy data-driven accountability, want a supported entry into international teaching (especially NQTs and career changers), and appreciate a clear, systematic approach to education.
SABIS may not suit teachers who value curriculum freedom and creativity, prefer inquiry-based or student-led approaches, want to design their own resources and schemes of work, find highly structured environments restrictive, or are experienced international teachers used to premium school autonomy.
This is not a value judgement — SABIS’s system delivers strong academic outcomes for students, and many teachers thrive in its structured environment. The key is knowing yourself and choosing accordingly. See our teacher reviews for first-hand experiences.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does SABIS follow a recognised curriculum?
SABIS uses its own proprietary curriculum, not the British, American, or IB curriculum. However, SABIS schools prepare students for external examinations (IGCSE, A-Level, SAT, AP) depending on the school and country, and the SABIS curriculum is mapped to ensure coverage of relevant content. Some schools offer dual pathways — SABIS curriculum plus external examination preparation. The curriculum is rigorous and academic-focused, with particular strength in Mathematics and Science.
How is SABIS different from GEMS or Nord Anglia?
GEMS and Nord Anglia operate schools with diverse curricula (British, American, IB) and give individual schools significant autonomy. SABIS operates on a single, proprietary educational system applied consistently across all schools. This means SABIS teachers have less curriculum freedom but benefit from a proven, supported system. The trade-off is autonomy vs structure. See our comparison guide.