primary schools
I have spent a great deal of time looking through past posts about education in Brussels and have learned so much!聽 We are looking to move to Brussels by August or September, hopefully in time for the new school year but it seems that we may have quite a time trying to find a spot for our 7 year old at this time of year.聽 We are just starting to look.聽 Employment will be in Diegem and a commute under 20 minutes to the office is preferable.聽 We'd like to live within a 10 to 15 minute walk to the school.聽 Our 7 year old is currently in 1st grade in the US at a Montessori school.聽 He speaks French but has not yet learned to read and write in French.聽 My husband speaks to our children in French and I speak to them in English which we plan to maintain when we move.聽 While he is doing fine in school, my husband is quite concerned that he will be behind already by Belgian standards based on his own primary school experience in Brussels (Chant d'Oiseau).聽 We would like him to be in a French school and hope he will do okay although he does find new situations to be very stressful.聽 I'm wondering if it would be advisable (or possible) to enroll him in 1P rather than 2P?聽 How would we go about making that decision?聽 We also have a 3 year old with an August 28th birthday.聽 Would it be possible or advisable to hold him back one year?聽 He is only speaking a little in French thus far and we may prefer to let him settle into our new life for a bit before enrolling him in maternelle rather than starting him immediately after arriving.聽 聽
Any suggestions on which schools we should consider contacting that would be a good environment and may possibly have space would be much appreciated!聽 Also, it would be nice to know which schools have a diverse cultural background.聽 Thanks!
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Welcome to Expat-Blog.
Feel free to come across the Schools and studies in Brussels forum as well.
I wish all the best.

David
Regarding which years they are in school, we don't take this decision lightly.聽 We definitely need to gain a better understanding of what would be expected of a child in P2.聽 From all of the reading I have done in the past two days, it seems that the rate of children needing to repeat a year prior to graduation is rather high.聽 Rather than having him struggling to catch up now, we are wondering if it might be better to hold him back now so that he learns to read, write, and do math in French in P1 rather than struggling to catch up and just generally feeling frustrated.聽 Based on our experience with his schooling thus far, we feel justified in being concerned that he will just shut down if he feels too frustrated rather than buckling down and working hard to catch up.聽 My question really is whether or not we would be allowed to register him for P1 if we as the parents feel that is best.
Regarding our younger son, I'm not suggesting putting him in a class with 2 year olds but rather start him with 4 year olds this coming year but then perhaps hold him back the last year of Maternelle before P1 if it feels appropriate at the time.聽 I basically want to know if this is allowed to be decided by the parents or if he would have to go into P1 on time based on his birthday falling days before the cutoff.聽 If we were to stay in the US, we were planning to start him in Kindergarten when he was 5 turning 6 rather than 4 turning 5 for several reasons.聽 We have time to figure that out.聽 Just curious more than anything on the policies.
Regarding your last comment, we are not looking for a school based on my husband's grade-school experience.聽 I was simply stating he was concerned about whether or not our older son is truly ready for P2.聽 I wouldn't guess that educational rigors have changed drastically.聽 We don't know anything about any of the schools.聽 That is why I am asking for help...
- location consideration
- diversity of student body
- quality of education
- desirable to have both kids at same school
While we will be under a relocation package rather than an "assignment", it may be possible to ask for help from the company paying for a private school for the first year since they are asking us to move so late in the year.聽 Any suggestions for a good private school for one year would also be appreciated.聽 We would also be open to living outside of Brussels and to expanding the commute time.
Thanks for any helpful advice anyone can lend!
Brussels French
Brabant Wallon / Vlaams Brabant (for 4 Kraainem and Wezembeek schools)
The nearest communes with French schools to Diegem (Machelen) where you'll find expats living in big numbers are :
1140 Evere
1030 Schaerbeek
1040 Etterbeek
1160 Auderghem
1200 Woluwe-St-Lambert
1150 Woluwe-St-Pierre
1950 Kraainem
1970 Wezembeek-Oppem
You need to forget for a moment your wish list for a school and simply find which schools have places.
I've helped many families over the years and can tell you a positive outlook to schooling will make all the difference. Concentrating and even contemplating negative things like doubling is going to hamper not just your school search but could effect how successful integration is. If a child is going to withdraw at school, they'll do it whatever the school year they are in. Belgian schools are very much take it or leave it, their rules, if you start by trying to do something different and asking your child to be put in a different class to the one they should be in, well good luck. It's quite normal for children to start school here aged 7 without French, I think you need to stop looking at all the hurdles to jump over and concentrate on enriching your child in different ways by researching what they can do after school, where you'd like to live.
Ok in the above postcodes there are roughly聽 90 schools. Out of those schools, expect only 10% to have places. You need to look at where these communes are, where the schools are in the communes, try and narrow it down further according to the type of area you want to live in - Etterbeek is inner city, WSP is green suburbs. Then get on the phone and at the same time send emails in French, don't expect many schools to reply to emails though. Ask for places according to year of birth, ie P2 and M2, if no places, ask how many are on the waiting list and ask to be put on it, ask for an email confirmation of position on the waiting list. You can accept places at several schools at once. If you only find waiting list places, check once a week, evey week between now and mid July, then start again mid August to mid September, if it takes that long to find a place.
As for private schools, well here is a complete map of all of them. Choose according to location and price and language.
Finally the R0 between 4 bras and Vilvoorde, that includes near Diegem, is the busiest road in Belgium. Look at ways to void as much of the RO as possible, such as using boul de la Woluwe up WSL/WSP.
Oh another thing, you want to see what level a P2 child should be at, take a look at the text books used, such as Galaxie Math and Math et Moustique in Maths.
page=25137&act=search&type=1&annee=2&discipline=5&mots=&editeur=
I'll give you a little help with the phone calls. Wezembeek, Kraainem, WSP and WSL are where I'd personally look, so long as you can afford the housing in that area. That narrows down choice to around 30 schools, take out "Ath茅n茅e Royal" ones out too. Catholic are usually more popular, they are not all strict and none overly religious, some use active pedagogies, just like communal or non religious aligned ones do too. Wezembeek and Kraainem have a limited intake as you have to live there, there is therefore less pressure for school places there.
Oh and in the east Brussels / Wezembeek / Tervuren areas, there are around 30 activities you can do after schools in English. It's a great place to live for a bilingual French-English child. I let our children do one activity each in English, they did rugby and Scouts and dancing.
If you join BCT, you can gain a whole social life in English, they now have after school groups for school age children too, previously things were very much geared towards the under 3s. The HQ is in Wezembeek in a community centre which offers lots of things in French too, some activities are here, others are in members' houses.
What is the issue with the "Ath茅n茅e Royal" schools? Totally full? Not desirable?
Merci!
As for Ath茅n茅e Royal primaires, ah well demographics and unpopularity with locals. For the WSP one, your child might be the only English speaker in the primaire, whereas go up to road and you'll find masses of them in the other local schools.
Bruxelles 1000 is 3 distinct areas, all of which are suburbs of Bruxelles Ville.
None of these areas are with 20 minutes commute of Diegem.
Few of the schools will have a diverse student body. Many children attending will be from disadvantaged backgrounds. Few English speaking in the majority of the schools, the few I'd recommend you would have zero chance of a place at.
Add to that Bruxelles Ville has a justified reputation as the very worst place to live for getting registered, you're likely to spend the first year in Belgium without full registration, meaning no health insurance refunds, difficulties with banking etc etc.
I am wondering why of all the areas of Brussels region, you are now looking at Bruxelles 1000.
Another terrible place to look would be 1050 post code.
I have already given you the post codes of all areas corresponding to your desires. Ignore them at your peril. This does sometimes happen, I end up saying "told you so".
Registration is never immediate. The Police must visit you. You then must return to the commune/gemeente to receive registration docuements. If you're an EU national, then it is straightforward. If you're the dependent of an EU national, it takes about 6 months as checks are made you're not claiming benefits, after which you get EU treaty rights. If you're a non EU national here are a student or on a work permit, it can take a while too. It really depends on circumstances. If you're an EU national, you can apply (it's not obligatory) for a residents' card, that takes about a month to be produced and to receive the PIN.
I'd truly appreciate any suggestions for resources to figure all of this out.
Thanks!

Thanks again for your insight!
Is there any benefit to having the actual card besides some level of indestructibility?
Many many thanks!
39 out of 113 secondaires in Brussels filled their 1ere secondaire places.
You may check which ones are full her.
You cannot change schools after P1, P3 and P5. You can only change schools after P2, P4, P6. You can change after all maternelle years. You have the first 15 days of September to change every year, for all school years (except P2, P4 and P6), after that you are locked in for the year in maternelle and 2 years in primaire. Therefore your strategy of putting your child into P1 would be disastrous if you dislike the school you have chosen, he'd have to stay there 2 years.
Secondary places, if the enrolments procedure stays the same, is based on order of proximity of primaire to home and secondaire to home. You should check before renting if your chosen primaire is 1st/2nd/3rd/4th/5th/6th+ nearest to home, 1st to 5th gets best points, 6th onwards are treated the same. At our children's 2 secondaires, you basically need to be 1st/2nd nearest primaire and secondaire to get in. You can check here the order of proximity of primaires and secondaires. This is not relevant for Wezembeek and Kraainem French primaires who receive average points which are not normally enough for the nearest 2 secondaires which are excellent.
There are no school reviews or comparison tables. The only means of comparison is if you ask each primaire for their CEB results, average scores, rather than percentage of passes, but most will probably say no. You can also take a look at the socio-economic index of each primaire and secondaire, indicating where the richer and poorer kids go to school. In WSP for example, out of 10 schools, 8 of them rate 17 to 20 out of 20 on this index, only 2 of them rate around 12 out of 20, indicating the children are poorer there than the other schools, not surprisingly these are the 2 most likely schools to have places. It's a crude way of measuring schools and the index was published on data now 4 years out of date.
My kids are French (husband) and Dutch/Indian. My son is 7 (march 6) and my daughter is 4 (August 3). They currently go to the French school in the Netherlands. They speak (and my son reads) fluent French and English and understand Dutch and Hindi.
We are moving to Brussels soon and are not stuck on an area (ideally though I would prefer international environment ). I would have preferred Frehch / English but as these schools are above 6K per child ... we can not.
Which good immersion school do u recommend? I would prefer immersion schools unless you recommend otherwise.
Thank you.
Choose French in Brussels to begin with as too late this year to apply for Dutch
You are making the most common mistake expat arrivals make in thinking you can choose any school. Locals camp overnight sometimes for places in Brussels schools or rent properties to get geographical advantage. Therefore under these conditions you need a reality check.
Where exactly will work be. Start from there
Zero chance... yikes!
As for area... what is a nice area then (cause my husband is working in the center) so we are open to areas.
I'm sorry I know you are helping, I appreciate it.
I'm genuinely lost. Want a great area and at the same time a wonderful school for the kids (number 1 priority actually).
Any tips?
So now you really need to answer the question of where work is. There are several "centres" in Brussels. Which street is work on? Without knowing where work is, pointless recommending where to look for schools or houses.
Thanks for all this. Helps a lot. Really appreciate it.
He works at聽 Candriam BELGIUM. Address: Avenue des Arts 58, 1000 Brussels.
Brussels is 40 per cent foreign reflected in school population.
A school with places is your goal. You are applying late in the year and not age 2 to 3 so your options are limited. You need to get on the phone once you ve decidwd urban or suburban
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