St. George's British International School

41°53′53″N 12°26′42″E / 41.89806°N 12.44500°E / 41.89806; 12.44500

St George's British International School
Location
Via Cassia, km 16

, ,
00123

Information
TypeInternational school
Established1958
Chair of the Board of GovernorsMrs Flaminia Muratori
PrincipalDr John Knight
Staff195
GenderCo-ed
Age3 to 18
Enrolment1034
Houses4
ColoursRed, White & Blue      
Websitehttp://www.stgeorge.school.it

St George's School S.R.L. unipersonale,[1] operating as St George's British International School, is a non-profit private international school located in Rome, Italy. It was founded in 1958 to serve Rome's British, international, and expatriate communities, and today educates over 1,000 pupils from more than 100 countries. The main campus, containing Junior and Senior Schools, is located in La Storta on the northern outskirts of the city. A second campus in central Rome serves Junior School children up to the age of 11.

History

St George’s British International School was founded in 1958, making it the oldest British international school in Italy.[2] Originally named The English School, the school was founded as an independent, not-for-profit HMC school owned by an association made up of parents of the school. The school is a founding member of the Council of British International Schools.

The School became known as St George's English School and relocated to Via Salaria in 1961, before locating to its current premises in 1968. In 2002, the school opened a second campus, located in the central Nomentana neighbourhood of Rome. In 2017, the City Centre campus located to a new purpose-fitted campus close to the Vatican in the Aurelio neighbourhood.

As of 2019, the school's choir and orchestra held an annual music tour, which took place in Malta that year, at the Salesian Theatre in Sliema.[3] As of 2024, it has 950 pupils, and a co-ed day boarding. Pupil age is 3 to 18. Head teacher was John Knight.[2]

Facilities and programmes

There are two campuses: La Storta and City Centre.[4] The main campus, containing Junior and Senior Schools, is based in La Storta on the northern outskirts of the city. A second campus, located in central Rome, serves Junior School pupils up to the age of 11.

The school follows an enhanced version of the National Curriculum for England, culminating in IGCSE examinations at the end of Year 11. In the Sixth Form, students may choose to undertake the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme or A-Levels with examinations sat at the end of Year 13.

The school's average IB Diploma score in 2025 was 36 points, one of the highest scoring IB schools in continental Europe.[5]

Co-curricular activities

The school has a number of boys and girls sports teams for various age groups which regularly compete against other teams and schools, including in rugby, football, and basketball. Other sports offered include athletics, cricket, gymnastics, field hockey, rounders, swimming, sailing, table tennis and volleyball.

Other after-school clubs include chess, coding, GTV, student newspaper, enterprise, cooking, arts, archaeology, film-making, computer programming and astronomy.[6]

Notable alumni

See also

References

  1. ^ "Privacy policy". St. George's British International School. Retrieved 24 September 2025.
  2. ^ a b "St George's British International School Rome". Spear's. 2024. Retrieved 20 January 2025.
  3. ^ "St George's British International School in Rome performing in Malta". Times of Malta. 1 March 2019. Retrieved 19 January 2025.
  4. ^ Kushwaha, Ayushi. "A Guide to St George's British International School". CEOWorld. Retrieved 20 January 2025.
  5. ^ "EU Top IB Schools - IB-Schools".
  6. ^ "Overview - St George's British International School, Rome".
  7. ^ "Alessandro Borghese, la storia dello chef più amato che si salvò dal naufragio dell'Achille Lauro". 19 February 2019.
  8. ^ "Alessandro Gassman (Magazine - luglio 2007)". 5 June 2009.
  9. ^ FORBES (6 December 2022). "Quién es Andrea Guerra, el empresario italiano que será el nuevo CEO de Prada". Forbes España (in Spanish). Retrieved 6 July 2023.
  10. ^ "King-Aribisala: Writing for me is like breathing". 18 August 2019.
  11. ^ Boffey, Daniel (26 December 2019). "Post-Brexit UK always welcome back in EU, says Timmermans". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 December 2019.