IB

IB Math Tuition for Tanglin Trust School (TTS) Students

Dedicated IB Math classes for Tanglin Trust School students — an international school in Singapore on the IB pathway.

Tanglin Trust School is an independent, non-profit international school in Singapore, providing a British-based education for students aged 3 to 18. The school was founded in 1925. DeepThink offers dedicated IB Math classes matched to the curriculum Tanglin Trust School students follow.

About Tanglin Trust School

Tanglin Trust School is an independent, non-profit international school in Singapore, providing a British-based education for students aged 3 to 18. Founded in 1925 by Anne Griffith-Jones, it is the oldest British international school in Southeast Asia. Built on the English National Curriculum, it leads students through the IGCSE to a distinctive sixth form offering both A Levels and the International Baccalaureate Diploma at its Portsdown Road campus.

Founded: 1925

How DeepThink supports Tanglin Trust School IB students

  • Dedicated IB Math class covering the IB Mathematics curriculum

  • As an international school, Tanglin Trust School follows the IB pathway (MYP or IGCSE into the IB Diploma) — our class is matched to it, not the local MOE syllabus

  • Small groups so your child gets genuine attention — every student's needs are taken care of, and no one gets left behind

  • Support from the pre-IB years through to the IB Diploma

The programme

What your child gets at DeepThink

Our dedicated IB class keeps students on the IB Mathematics curriculum throughout their secondary years.

Class size

Small group

IB-only

Weekly duration

1.5 hours

Curriculum

IB Mathematics

Levels covered

Pre-IB to IB Diploma

Frequently asked questions

Clear answers for parents

Does DeepThink have a class specifically for Tanglin Trust School's IB curriculum?

Yes. Tanglin Trust School students follow the IB Mathematics curriculum, and we run a dedicated IB Math class to match.

How does the IB Math curriculum differ from the local secondary syllabus?

IB Math covers different content at a different pace from the MOE secondary syllabus. Students who attend a general secondary tuition class risk spending time on O-Level or SEC exam content that won't appear in their assessments. Our dedicated IB class avoids that.

When should an IB student start tuition?

We recommend starting early — the IB curriculum diverges from the local secondary syllabus quickly, and gaps compound. Students who join mid-programme can also be accommodated.

What makes DeepThink different for IB students?

A dedicated IB class that stays on the IB curriculum throughout your child's secondary years.

School Overview

Tanglin Trust School is an independent international school in Singapore, run as a non-profit organisation, that provides a British-based education with an international perspective for students aged 3 to 18. Founded in 1925 by Anne Griffith-Jones, it is the oldest British international school in Southeast Asia. The school began with five pupils in premises within the Tanglin Club, offering British expatriate families an alternative to sending their children away to boarding school in Britain at an early age. From these origins it grew steadily, and after a series of mergers the school settled on its present campus on Portsdown Road in 1981, adopting the name Tanglin Trust School in 1996.

The school is organised into three sections — an Infant School for ages 3 to 7, a Junior School for ages 7 to 11, and a Senior School and Sixth Form for ages 11 to 18 — each with its own building and facilities within the single Portsdown Road campus. Tanglin serves a large and highly international community of around 2,800 students, and its emblem and house system reflect a long institutional history. Its programmes of study are built on the English National Curriculum, leading through the IGCSE to a distinctive sixth form that offers both A Levels and the International Baccalaureate Diploma. The campus sits at 95 Portsdown Road, near the one-north and Buona Vista MRT stations.

Curriculum and the IB Pathway

The English National Curriculum provides the basis for Tanglin's programmes of study from the early years onward. Infant School pupils follow the Early Years Foundation Stage in Nursery and Reception and then Key Stage 1, Junior School pupils follow Key Stage 2, and Senior School pupils progress through Key Stage 3, then Key Stage 4 leading to the International General Certificate of Secondary Education (IGCSE) in Years 10 and 11. As students move up the school they are presented with a widening choice of subjects. This is an international pathway and differs from the Singapore MOE syllabus in both content and assessment: there is no O-Level or Singapore-Cambridge SEC examination, and the school is inspected every three years under the British Schools Overseas framework, where it has repeatedly been rated Outstanding, the highest possible grade.

What sets Tanglin apart in its sixth form is that it offers both routes to university — students in Years 12 and 13 may take A Levels or the International Baccalaureate Diploma, and the school describes itself as the only one in Singapore to offer both. For families on the IB route, Diploma Mathematics is taken as one of two courses — Mathematics: Analysis and Approaches or Mathematics: Applications and Interpretation — each at Standard or Higher Level, and the choice shapes university options in fields such as engineering, economics, and the sciences. Because the IB Mathematics syllabus moves at a different pace and covers different material from the local curriculum, families sometimes look for support matched specifically to the IB. DeepThink, a specialist mathematics tuition centre, runs small-group classes aligned to the IB Mathematics curriculum, including both the Analysis and Approaches and Applications and Interpretation routes, which some Tanglin families find useful for consolidating understanding ahead of the Diploma years.

Admissions

Admission to Tanglin Trust School is by application directly to the school rather than through Singapore's PSLE posting exercise or the Direct School Admission scheme, which apply only to local MOE schools. Families apply for a place in a specific year group, and offers are made on the basis of the school's own assessment of each child alongside the availability of places in the relevant section — Infant, Junior, or Senior School. Because the school runs from age 3 to 18 across three sections, there are natural entry points at the start of each phase as well as places that open up in other year groups.

As an international school, Tanglin draws its students overwhelmingly from expatriate and internationally mobile families; under Singapore government policy, local Singapore citizens generally require approval to enrol in an international school. Around 60 to 70 percent of students are British passport holders, though British nationals make up a smaller share of the community, and dozens of nationalities are represented across the school. Prospective families are encouraged to begin the application process well ahead of their intended start date, as demand for places at popular entry points can be high. The school's admissions office publishes the current entry requirements, assessment steps, and fees, which are the authoritative source for applicants.

Facilities and Co-Curricular Activities

Tanglin's single campus on Portsdown Road brings together its Infant, Junior, and Senior Schools, each with its own dedicated building and facilities alongside shared provision for sport, the arts, and learning across the age range. The purpose-built campus has developed over decades on the site the school has occupied since 1981, and the separate buildings allow each section to have an environment suited to the ages it serves while remaining part of one community.

Sport is a prominent part of school life, and Tanglin competes within the Federation of British International Schools in Asia, taking part in a wide range of activities including athletics, swimming, football, rugby, netball, basketball, tennis, badminton, cricket, gymnastics, golf, and volleyball, among others. Students belong to one of the school's houses — Alexandra, Cameron, Raeburn, Wessex, Weyhill, Portsdown, Winchester, and Claymore — several of which carry the names of schools and places from Tanglin's history. Together with the academic curriculum, this breadth of sport, the arts, and house activity gives students opportunities to develop interests and take on responsibility beyond the classroom.

School Community and Culture

Tanglin's culture is shaped by its long history as the oldest British international school in Southeast Asia and by the highly international community it serves. Although the school provides a British-based education, its student body spans dozens of nationalities, and the great majority of families are expatriate or internationally mobile. The three-section structure — Infant, Junior, and Senior School — and the house system give the school a strong sense of community and continuity, with many children progressing through the school from the early years to the sixth form. Pastoral care and a settled, well-established environment are central to how the school supports students through these stages.

For many families, joining Tanglin also means navigating a move to Singapore and, sometimes, a change of curriculum at the same time, and students entering the senior years need to settle quickly into the demands of the IGCSE and then the A-Level or IB Diploma pathway. Mathematics is a subject where a smooth transition matters, because the IB approach can differ noticeably from a student's previous system. DeepThink's small-group IB Mathematics classes, which follow the IB curriculum rather than the local syllabus, are one option that some families in the Tanglin community use to help their children build confidence during this transition and through the Diploma years.

Frequently Asked Questions about Tanglin Trust School

Tanglin Trust School is one of the most established international schools in Singapore and the oldest British international school in Southeast Asia, founded in 1925. It provides a British-based education for students aged 3 to 18, leading through the IGCSE to a sixth form offering both A Levels and the IB Diploma. The school is inspected every three years under the British Schools Overseas framework and has repeatedly been rated Outstanding, the highest possible grade.

Tanglin follows the English National Curriculum as the basis for its programmes of study from the early years onward, with students taking the IGCSE in Years 10 and 11. In the sixth form, students may study either A Levels or the International Baccalaureate Diploma. This is an international pathway and does not lead to the Singapore-Cambridge O-Level or SEC examinations.

Yes. In Years 12 and 13, Tanglin students can take the International Baccalaureate Diploma. Unusually, the school offers both routes in its sixth form — A Levels as well as the IB Diploma — and describes itself as the only school in Singapore to offer both. On the IB route, Diploma Mathematics is taken as either Analysis and Approaches or Applications and Interpretation, each at Standard or Higher Level.

Admission is by application directly to the school, not through the PSLE posting exercise or Direct School Admission, which apply only to local MOE schools. Families apply for a place in a specific year group, and offers are made based on the school's own assessment and the availability of places in the relevant section. The school's admissions office publishes the current requirements and fees.

Tanglin educates students from age 3 to 18 across three sections on one campus: the Infant School for ages 3 to 7, the Junior School for ages 7 to 11, and the Senior School and Sixth Form for ages 11 to 18. Many students progress through the school from the early years to the sixth form.

Tanglin Trust School is at 95 Portsdown Road, Singapore 139299, in the central part of the island, near the one-north and Buona Vista MRT stations. The school has occupied this campus since 1981, and its Infant, Junior, and Senior Schools each have their own building within the single site.

For students on the IB route, IB Mathematics is part of the International Baccalaureate Diploma and differs from the MOE secondary and A-Level syllabuses in both content and structure. Students take either Analysis and Approaches or Applications and Interpretation rather than E-Math, A-Math, or H2 Mathematics, so support matched to the IB is more relevant than general O-Level preparation. Tanglin also offers A Levels in its sixth form as an alternative route.

Yes. DeepThink runs small-group classes aligned to the IB Mathematics curriculum, covering both the Analysis and Approaches and Applications and Interpretation routes at Standard and Higher Level. Lessons follow the IB syllabus rather than the local secondary syllabus, which suits students on the IB Diploma pathway at Tanglin.

Sport is a prominent part of life at Tanglin, which competes within the Federation of British International Schools in Asia across a wide range of activities including athletics, swimming, football, rugby, netball, basketball, tennis, badminton, cricket, gymnastics, golf, and volleyball, among others. Students also belong to one of the school's houses — Alexandra, Cameron, Raeburn, Wessex, Weyhill, Portsdown, Winchester, and Claymore — which take part in school activities across the age range.

The school was founded in 1925 by Anne Griffith-Jones and began with five pupils in premises within the Tanglin Club, offering British expatriate families an alternative to early boarding school in Britain. It is the oldest British international school in Southeast Asia. After a series of mergers with other British international schools in Singapore, the school moved to its present Portsdown Road campus in 1981 and adopted the name Tanglin Trust School in 1996.

Yes. Tanglin provides a British-based education with an international perspective, built on the English National Curriculum and leading through the IGCSE to A Levels and the IB Diploma in the sixth form. It is inspected under the British Schools Overseas framework. While around 60 to 70 percent of students are British passport holders, the wider community includes dozens of nationalities.

Yes. Tanglin is distinctive in offering both pathways in its sixth form: students in Years 12 and 13 may study A Levels or the International Baccalaureate Diploma, and the school describes itself as the only one in Singapore to offer both. Before the sixth form, all students follow the English National Curriculum through to the IGCSE in Years 10 and 11.

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