International Schools That Offer Both IB and AP — A Parent's Guide
A growing number of international schools worldwide now offer both IB and AP pathways, giving families unprecedented flexibility in their educational choices. F...

A growing number of international schools worldwide now offer both IB and AP pathways, giving families unprecedented flexibility in their educational choices. For expat families moving between countries, or parents whose children might transfer mid-programme, this dual-curriculum approach is invaluable. But how do these schools actually manage both curricula, and which approach is right for your child?
Why Schools Offer Both Programmes
International schools have discovered that offering both IB and AP is good business and good pedagogy. Different families have different university targets: a student aiming for US universities benefits from AP's currency in American admissions, while UK and European universities often prefer IB. By offering both, schools can serve families with genuinely different university aspirations.
Students transfer mid-stream. Expat families relocate, and a student might begin IB at one school, transfer to another country, and need to switch to AP. Schools that offer both eliminate this friction. And in the international education market, offering maximum choice is a competitive advantage.
How Dual-Curriculum Schools Typically Work
The Parallel Tracks Model is the most common approach. Students choose their pathway in Year 10 or 11 and follow either a complete IB track (MYP to DP) or an AP track (US High School Diploma + AP courses). The school maintains separate curricula, teacher teams, and assessments for each programme.
The Hybrid Model is increasingly popular. Students follow a core IB curriculum but supplement with AP electives in specific subjects, or vice versa. This approach maximises flexibility while maintaining curricular coherence. Stamford American International School in Singapore is a notable example, offering AP, IB, and BTEC in a single customisable diploma.
The Sequential Model allows students to complete AP work in early high school, then transition to IB Diploma in the final two years — or start IB and later add AP certifications. This requires exceptional curriculum coordination but offers the ultimate in flexibility.
Schools Around the World Offering Both
Europe:
- Leysin American School (Switzerland) — Boarding school offering both IB Diploma and AP, allowing students to choose or combine pathways in Grades 11-12
- TASIS The American School in England (UK) — Day and boarding school with parallel IB and AP programmes; 94% of AP students scored 3 or higher in 2025
- Marymount International School (London) — Offers IB Diploma alongside AP course options
Middle East:
- GEMS Dubai American Academy (UAE) — Offers American curriculum with AP Capstone Diploma alongside IB options for upper-school flexibility
- Collegiate International School (Dubai) — American curriculum school offering AP courses with IB pathway options
Asia:
- Stamford American International School (Singapore) — Offers IB, AP, and BTEC alongside US High School Diploma; students customise their pathway across all three curricula
- Chinese International School (Hong Kong) — Bilingual school offering both IB and AP course options
North America:
- Bishop Strachan School (Toronto, Canada) — Independent school offering both IB and AP across multiple subjects including AP Calculus, Chemistry, Chinese, and English
- York School (Toronto, Canada) — Offers both IB and AP pathways with strong university placement support
- Upper Canada College (Toronto, Canada) — Offers AP courses with IB options in select programmes
The availability of both programmes varies by school and year level. Most schools allow the choice at Grade 10 or 11, and some permit mid-programme switches with careful planning.
What to Ask When Choosing a Dual-Curriculum School
Can my child switch between IB and AP after starting? Some schools allow seamless switching; others have firm deadlines. Understand the policy before enrolling, as transferring mid-programme can involve lost credits or delayed graduation.
Are all IB/AP subjects available, or only select ones? A school might offer full IB Diploma but only AP courses in Sciences, Math, and Languages. Verify that your child's desired subject combinations are actually available in both curricula.
Do teachers have qualifications in both programmes? A teacher certified in IB but not AP may deliver AP content differently than intended. Ask whether teachers have formal training in each programme's assessment philosophy.
What are the university placement outcomes for each track? Request data on where IB vs AP graduates are admitted, particularly to your target universities.
How does the school handle workload differences? IB students typically carry a heavier overall workload due to Extended Essays and TOK. AP students have more flexibility but face concentrated exam pressure. Ask how the school supports time management across both pathways.
How Tutoring Supports Students in Dual-Curriculum Schools
Students at dual-curriculum schools often benefit from targeted academic support. Students switching pathways mid-stream may have gaps in content knowledge that tutoring can quickly address. If a student transfers from AP to IB in Year 12, they'll need crash-course support in IB-specific components like the Extended Essay and TOK.
Students combining elements of both curricula need expert guidance on assessment differences. An AP Math course differs significantly from IB Math in pacing and problem-solving approach; a tutor familiar with both can clarify these shifts.
At ++tutors, our tutors specialise in both IB and AP across all subjects. Whether your child is switching pathways, balancing a hybrid curriculum, or simply needs subject-specific support, we can match them with a tutor who understands both programmes.



