GSE Partner School Program: Batari School and Maitreyawira School

Thomas Gardner
Children sat in a classroom with raised hands, their teacher stands at the front of the class
Reading time: 4 minutes

The Global Scale of English (GSE) Partner School program by Pearson stands as a beacon of innovation and excellence. This initiative is not just about enhancing English language ability: it's about transforming the educational journey for both teachers and students. Today, we celebrate the success stories of two institutions: Batari School and Maitreyawira School, both of which have embraced the GSE Partner School program with inspiring results.

Learn about our GSE partner school program success stories
Play
Privacy and cookies

By watching, you agree Pearson can share your viewership data for marketing and analytics for one year, revocable by deleting your cookies.

Batari school: A journey of tailored learning and teacher empowerment

Since joining the Pearson GSE Partner School program, Batari School in Medan has witnessed a remarkable transformation in its approach to English language education. With students from diverse backgrounds, the GSE framework has empowered teachers to tailor their teaching methods to align with each student's specific language level. This personalized approach has not only improved language proficiency but also built confidence and competence among students.

Bapak Feliex Lee, a teacher at Batari School, talks about how the GSE Toolkit makes lesson planning easier and helps create quality, level-appropriate lessons for students. This tool reduces teachers' workload so they can focus more on student growth. The Pearson English Journey program, with its courses, tests and certifications, guides students to reach fluency efficiently.

The results

The results speak for themselves. Batari School has reported measurable progress in students' language skills, with average gains of 5.9 points on the GSE scale between grades 11 and 12. This success shows how effective targeted support and a clear plan are for learning a language. Before joining the GSE Partner School program, teachers worked with varied methodologies, leading to inconsistencies. Now, with regular tests, teachers can find out where students need help and give the right support to improve their English.

Transforming Education: Batari School's Journey with the GSE Program
Play
Privacy and cookies

By watching, you agree Pearson can share your viewership data for marketing and analytics for one year, revocable by deleting your cookies.

Maitreyawira school: From learning English to living it

At Sekolah Maitreyawira School in Deliserdang, the GSE Partner School program has been a catalyst for change. The school wanted a reliable international way to measure students' English skills. The GSE framework provides that, helping teachers set clear goals and customize lessons for each student.

Ibu Hera Feitra Lubis, an educator at Maitreyawira School, emphasizes the value of the training provided by Pearson. This training has equipped teachers with the skills to set goals using the GSE Learning Objectives, integrate them into lesson plans, and focus on the critical language skills needed for proficiency. The digital assessments have further empowered teachers to measure progress and support students according to their individual needs.

Maitreyawira School has embraced the GSE program to not only teach English but to enable students to live it. The program ensures that every student develops real communication skills, equipping them with the tools needed to thrive in the world. The GSE's data-driven approach has personalized learning, resulting in increased student engagement and motivation. With clear learning objectives at every point on the GSE scale, teachers can design the best learning pathways and work towards achieving specific goals.

The results

The impact has been strong, with students at Maitreyawira School improving their GSE scores by an average of 5.4 points. This shows how dedicated the teachers are and how effective the GSE curriculum is. The school's overall approach helps students become confident global citizens.

Elevating Learning: Maitreyawira School's Success with the GSE Program
Play
Privacy and cookies

By watching, you agree Pearson can share your viewership data for marketing and analytics for one year, revocable by deleting your cookies.

A shared vision for excellence

Both Batari and Maitreyawira Schools show how the GSE Partner School program transforms educational practices. By offering a structured and consistent framework for teaching and assessment, these schools have boosted both student results and the quality of English instruction overall.

Teachers now have the tools to deliver effective, level-based lessons, while students enjoy a clear understanding of their progress and the steps needed to achieve their goals. This alignment has brought consistency to teaching practices, raised proficiency levels and encouraged a collaborative environment among educators.

The success of these institutions highlights the importance of equipping teachers with the necessary tools, training and support. As educators gain confidence in delivering skills-based teaching, students become more engaged and motivated, paving the way for future success.

Setting the stage for students

The stories of Batari School and Maitreyawira School are a testament to the dedication of educators and the transformative potential of the Pearson GSE Partner School program. By aligning teaching practices with internationally recognized standards, these schools are preparing students for global opportunities and a brighter future.

The GSE Partner School program extends beyond curriculum improvements; it acts as a driver for educational excellence. Empowering teachers and motivating students sets the stage for a future in which learners are not only skilled in English but also confident in seizing opportunities. 

More blogs from Pearson

  • Teacher talking to girl working on laptop in classroom smiling
    Designed for learning, built for growth: How Big Ben Education Group reimagined short-term programs
    By Kathy Chan
    Reading time: 3 minutes

    The challenge: Creating meaningful learning in short-term programs

    In recent years, Big Ben Education Group faced a challenge: how to deliver meaningful learning within short-term programs. Although teachers were passionate and students motivated, their short-term courses lacked a clear academic structure, making learning feel rushed and less impactful. At the same time, they relied heavily on a single market and sought to attract a more diverse, global student mix.

    This raised a critical question: How do you design a short-term program that is both academically meaningful and appealing to a global student audience? That question led to the launch of their first Winter Camp in 2024.

    The turning point: From camp to structured learning experience

    The Winter Camp marked a major shift. For the first time, students from across China, Korea, Japan, Central Asia and the Middle East were brought together. Managing this level of cultural and linguistic diversity required more than enthusiasm; it required structure.

    The school introduced Big English as a core academic framework, giving teachers clarity on learning objectives and ensuring consistency across levels, even within a condensed timeframe.

    But the transformation didn’t stop in the classroom. Excursions were redesigned with clear learning goals, turning them into opportunities for real-world language application. This shift from activities to outcomes required careful planning and strong collaboration between academic and operations teams.  What emerged was something new – a structured, student-centered learning experience that balanced academic rigor with real-world engagement.

  • Students sat at a table with microphones talking
    Building fluent, confident speakers: better ways to assess speaking
    By Charlotte Guest
    Reading time: 6 minutes

    Why traditional speaking assessments can make students feel stressed

    Traditional speaking tests often feel high-stakes and performative. Students are asked to respond on demand, usually in front of a teacher or peers, with little room for hesitation or self-correction. This setup can make it harder for students to show what they can really do because:

    • Time pressure shifts focus from communicating meaning to avoiding mistakes
    • Teacher-centered evaluation can feel judgmental rather than supportive
    • One-off testing may not capture a learner's true abilitiy, especially if they're nervous. 

    When people feel anxious, it often affects their fluency. They find it harder to think so they pause more, forget words and feel less confident. As a result, assessments may reflect how comfortable someone feels under pressure, rather than how effectively they can communicate.

    Key components of speaking fluency to evaluate

    Fluency isn't just about talking fast. It involves several clear signs.

  • Two young girls fistbumping eachother in celebration
    Debunking myths about neurodivergence and language learning
    By Charlotte Guest
    Reading time: 5 minutes

    Can neurodivergent learners really learn a new language?

    Neurodivergent people can learn new languages successfully. Often, what seems like an inability is actually due to a mismatch between traditional teaching methods and how different brains process information.

    Research across ADHD, autism and dyslexia consistently shows that language learning is not only possible but can offer cognitive, social and even emotional benefits. The key variable isn’t capacity, it’s approach.

    Common myths about ADHD, autism and dyslexia in language learning

    Myth 1: “People with ADHD can’t focus enough to learn a language”

    Fact: ADHD brains often thrive with novelty, variety and stimulation all of which language learning naturally provides.

    While research on ADHD and language learning is still emerging, scholars highlight that the field is under-researched, not evidence of inability. This gap reinforces that perceived difficulties are often due to teaching methods rather than learner capacity. Traditional methods (long grammar drills, passive memorization) can fail ADHD learners. But when learning includes:

    • Short, varied activities
    • Speaking and interaction
    • Gamified tools
    • Real-world usage

    Attention often improves, not worsens.

    Reframe: It’s not a focus deficit, it’s a method mismatch.

    Myth 2: “Dyslexia makes learning another language too difficult”

    Fact: Dyslexia affects reading and decoding,  not intelligence or the ability to acquire language.

    In fact, many dyslexic learners:

    • Excel in spoken language skills
    • Develop strong pattern recognition
    • Benefit from multisensory input (audio + visual + movement)

    Difficulties usually arise when teaching is overly text-heavy.

    Reframe: Dyslexia changes how language is learned, not whether it can be learned.

    Myth 3: “Autistic learners shouldn’t be pushed into bilingualism”

    Fact: There is no evidence that learning multiple languages harms autistic individuals. Reviews have shown that bilingualism does not have negative effects on autistic children, despite long-standing misconceptions among professionals. In many cases, it can:

    • Support communication flexibility
    • Enhance social connection (especially in multilingual families)
    • Strengthen cognitive processing

    The outdated belief that bilingualism causes confusion has been widely debunked. More recent reviews also highlight cognitive, social and identity-related benefits of bilingualism in autism, challenging deficit-based assumptions. 

    Reframe: Language learning can expand communication,  not limit it.

    Myth 4: “Neurodivergent learners just need more discipline”

    Fact: What looks like “lack of effort” is often cognitive overload.

    Neurodivergent learners may struggle when:

    • Instructions are unclear
    • Tasks rely on one learning modality
    • Pacing is rigid
    • Working memory is overloaded

    Educational research shows that students are very different from each other, and teaching should change to fit those differences.

    Reframe: The issue isn’t motivation,  it’s accessibility.

    Why traditional teaching methods don’t work for every brain

    Most language classrooms still rely on:

    • Heavy text-based instruction
    • One-size-fits-all pacing
    • Passive memorization
    • Limited sensory engagement

    These approaches conflict with what we know about different ways of learning (learner modalities),  the idea that people process information differently (visual, auditory, kinesthetic, etc.).

    The modality principle of multimedia learning shows that people learn better when information is presented through multiple channels (e.g., visuals + audio instead of text alone). This is especially important for neurodivergent learners.

    Bottom line: When teaching adapts to the learner, outcomes improve dramatically.

    How educators and parents can support diverse learners

    Start with this principle: the learner is not the problem; the system might be.

    For educators:

    • Offer multiple ways to engage with content
    • Design activities that include speaking, listening, and movement
    • Avoid equating speed with ability
    • Normalize different learning paths

    For parents:

    • Focus on encouragement, not pressure
    • Choose programs that emphasize communication, not rote memorization
    • Advocate for inclusive teaching approaches in schools