How an international school in Singapore is preparing students for AI, technology and life beyond the classroom

Published on
January 19, 2026

Table of contents

Choosing the right international school in Singapore today means looking beyond academic results alone. Parents are increasingly asking how schools balance AI and technology, online safety, wellbeing and real human connection, while still preparing students for a rapidly changing future.

At XCL World Academy, technology is embraced, but never at the expense of childhood, character, or community.

In a recent MoneyFM Saturday Mornings Show interview, hosts Glenn van Zutphen and Neil Humphreys explored key topics in digital education with Mark Petterson, Secondary Years Principal, and Maria Sweeney, Primary Years Principal at XCL World Academy. The conversation focused on digital citizenship, online safety, and building resilience, offering practical insights on how schools and families can work together to help children navigate technology responsibly while maintaining a healthy balance with real-world learning, play, and social interaction.

Maria and Marks shared beliefs are simple yet powerful: technology should enhance learning, not replace human connection.

Healthy Technology Use Starts With Balance and Purpose

One of the biggest questions parents ask today is simple, yet complex: how much technology is too much?

According to Mark, there is no universal rulebook.

“Parents are grappling with how to stay ahead of technology because it is evolving so rapidly. Digital fluency is important, but like most things in life, technology is best in moderation.”

At XCL World Academy, the focus is not on rejecting technology, but on using it responsibly and purposefully. Schools and parents work together to share this responsibility, recognising that every household and every child is different.

Technology in the Early and Primary Years: Engagement Over Entertainment

In the Early and Primary Years, Maria emphasises that technology should never replace play, movement and hands-on learning.

“The younger the child, the less they use technology. Play is the work of young children. It’s how they make sense of the world.”

At XCL World Academy, technology in the Primary Years is:

• Intentional, not constant

• Used to deepen understanding, not distract

• Designed to support vocabulary development, coordination and real-world learning

A key question guides every decision:

Is technology being used for entertainment, or for meaningful engagement?

When technology enhances learning, it has a place. When it replaces sensory exploration and social interaction, it does not.

From Command to Consent: Guiding Teenagers in the Digital World

For adolescents, managing technology is less about strict rules and more about trust, dialogue and understanding.

Mark explains that teenagers are wired to take risks, making simple commands ineffective.

“It’s about shifting from command to consent. Young people want to understand the why behind boundaries.”

Rather than static rules that quickly become outdated, it is important for us to focus on:

• Open conversations about online boundaries

• Clear explanations around safety and wellbeing

• Helping students understand the long-term impact of their digital choices

When students understand the rationale, they are more likely to make responsible decisions independently.

A Technology-Responsible School Environment

Early last year, XCL World Academy introduced a technology-responsible policy in the Secondary Years.

Between 8:00am and 4:30pm:

• School-issued laptops are used only under teacher direction in lessons

• No personal devices, phones, headphones or screens are used during breaks or lunchtime

The outcome has been powerful.

Students are:

• Playing sports during breaks

• Forming activity clubs such as chess clubs and LEGO clubs

• Sitting together, talking and building real friendships

“We’re seeing young people reconnect. Those interpersonal skills are still critical, and technology was getting in the way of that.”

Schools and Parents: The Power of Consistency

A recurring theme in the conversation was the importance of alignment between school and home.

Maria notes that children, especially younger ones, thrive on consistency.

“It’s very difficult when schools have clear parameters, but at home there’s unlimited, non-essential tech use. Healthy habits are built through consistency.”

When parents and schools share similar expectations around technology, children gain clarity, confidence and stronger self-regulation.

Bullying, Cyber Safety and Digital Footprints

While bullying has always existed, the online world introduces new layers of complexity. Mark notes that digital spaces can feel faceless, which can lead young people to say things online that they would never say in person.

At XCL World Academy, teachers adopt a proactive approach that explicitly teaches digital citizenship, online responsibility and awareness of students’ digital footprints and long-term online presence. Parents are encouraged to stay engaged and informed, as independence is important, but maintaining a clear understanding of how children interact online plays a key role in safeguarding their wellbeing.

Preparing Students for AI With Ethics and Humanity

Artificial intelligence is reshaping education, and XCL World Academy is preparing students for this shift through a carefully structured, future-focused approach.

In the Primary Years, XCL World Academy focuses on building the foundations students need to thrive in a technology-driven world, without rushing them into tools. The emphasis is on developing strong thinking habits such as asking meaningful questions, thinking critically and creatively, and making informed judgments. These skills form the basis of how students will later engage with emerging technologies, including artificial intelligence.

This foundation is reinforced through XCLerate, the school’s future skills programme, which begins as early as age 5. XCLerate equips students with the human capabilities and real-life skills that matter most in a technology-driven world, including critical thinking, creativity, ethical decision-making, adaptability, and collaboration. By cultivating these skills from an early age, students grow into not only confident and capable users of technology, but also thoughtful, responsible learners who can apply their knowledge with purpose and impact.

From Grade 6, this exposure is formalised through a dedicated AI programme powered by SureStart. SureStart is a structured, project-based, mentorship-driven programme that develops both technical and professional skills, preparing students for real-world AI applications and future careers. Through ongoing mentorship and regular engagement with postgraduate AI experts from leading institutions such as MIT, Stanford, Carnegie Mellon, NYU, and NTU, as well as industry professionals, students go beyond simply learning how to use AI tools. They develop a deeper understanding of how AI works, learn to evaluate accuracy and reliability, ask better questions, and use technology ethically, without replacing independent thought or creativity.

As Maria explains, this approach is underpinned by three enduring human values: empathy, creativity and humility. “AI has no empathy and no humility,” she notes. “These are uniquely human strengths, and they come from real interaction with people.”

Modelling Matters: Adults Set the Tone

One of the most powerful insights from the conversation was the role of adults as role models.

Children may not always follow instructions, but they always notice behaviour.

At XCL World Academy, initiatives such as Sustained Silent Reading (SSR) reinforce this belief. For 15 minutes each day, students and staff read together, modelling focus, presence and balance.

“If we expect students to put devices away, we need to do the same.”

Looking Ahead: What Parents Can Expect

As XCL World Academy looks to the coming years, priorities include:

• Strengthening digital citizenship education

• Expanding wellbeing and character education

• Deepening understanding of AI, ethics and digital footprints

• Continuing to build strong foundations in literacy, numeracy and human connection

The goal remains consistent across every stage of schooling: to develop confident, resilient learners who are prepared for the future, without losing what makes them human.

Discover XCL World Academy

If you are exploring an international school in Singapore that balances AI and technology with wellbeing, values and real-world readiness, we invite you to experience XCL World Academy firsthand.

Meet our academic leaders and teachers

• Learn how we integrate AI, digital citizenship and future-ready skills

Tour our Early Years, Primary and Secondary campuses

• Understand how we support every child’s academic and personal growth

Register for our upcoming Open House預約個人化校園導覽 了解XCL世界學院如何培養學生在互聯互通、科技驅動的世界中茁壯成長。

常見問題

獲取準家長們關於我們學校最常見問題的答案。

XWA採用什麼課程?

XCL世界書院是一所經授權的IB世界學校,提供IB一貫制課程:小學項目(PYP)、中學項目(MYP)和IB文憑項目(IBDP)。11-12年級的學生還可以修讀大學先修課程(AP課程)或完成WASC認證的高中文憑。這種課程彈性在新加坡的國際學校中實屬罕見。

費用是多少?

請瀏覽費用頁面,以了解各年級的詳細費用。

XWA是否提供英語語言支援?

是的。英語作為附加語言(EAL)課程基礎英語課程(FEP)支援需要在正規學習之外提升英語能力的學生。學校也為初級程度的學生提供密集英語課程。

學生何時可以入學?

XCL世界書院提供滾動式招生,因此學生可以在一年中的任何時間入學。如需完整的學術行事曆,請點擊此處

如何申請

線上申請開始。XWA隨後會安排一場適合年齡的評估,並邀請您的家人參觀校園。招生團隊將引導您完成每個步驟。欲了解更多資訊,請透過電子郵件聯繫我們:admissions@xwa.edu.sg,致電+65 6230 4230,或點擊此處WhatsApp我們

XWA招收的學生年齡範圍為何?

XWA招收從18個月大(幼兒園)到19歲(12年級)的學生,所有年級都在同一校園。

畢業生都去了哪些大學?

XWA 畢業生遍佈英國、美國、加拿大、澳洲和亞洲的頂尖大學,包括常春藤盟校,以及加州大學柏克萊分校、波士頓大學、麥吉爾大學、多倫多大學、倫敦大學學院、倫敦國王學院、巴黎政治學院、雪梨大學、新加坡國立大學、南洋理工大學和新加坡管理大學。個人化的升學輔導從八年級就開始,引導學生找到最適合的升學途徑和全球機會。

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