Client Affairs
Elite Swiss School Prepares Wealthy Next Gen

A 132-year-old private school in St Gallen comes with a price tag, but it says its work in preparing pupils to thrive in a fast-changing world gives them unrivalled opportunities. The school is an example of how UHNW families spend their resources.
Globally, there are about 18,000 ultra-high net worth families
with a net worth of $250 million or more, and many parents must
have wondered how best to prepare their offspring to use wealth
wisely and effectively and build their own achievements. An
obvious starting point is education.
Technologies are disrupting business and new ways of working mean
that the generation that takes the helm in a few years’ time
needs to be as well prepared as possible. And one school in
Switzerland that has a heritage stretching back over a century
reckons it’s also very dialled into the challenges of today.
The Institut auf dem Rosenberg, based in St Gallen, recently
launched a “Humanix®” programme, which it says is unique. Humanix
trains students' cognitive capacities and literacy through the
study of data. The school says it uses state-of-the-art
technology to engage and enthuse students, all the while handling
core subjects with all the rigour one would expect of an
expensive school founded in Victorian times.
By attending the school, students emerge with the kind of
aptitudes that equip them to handle responsibilities,
including family wealth and business, Bernhard Gademann, who is
head of the school, told WealthBriefing in a recent
interview. His family has run the school for four
generations.
“One thing we understand is that wealth carries responsibility,”
Gademann said. “Students need to remember that one reason why
their families are wealthy is that at one point, an ancestor
decided not to be average. This means you are obliged to go
further and be worthy of this gift.”
"As our parents are highly successful entrepreneurs from all over
the world, we like to take inspiration for new course contents
directly from them. In one example, a parent mentioned that
schools fail to educate and train students in the art of
constructive dispute. This conversation inspired us to research
and within a short time period we introduced a course called `The
Art of Conflict’,” he said.
There are 230 pupils in total, and a maximum class size of 12.
Pupils come from more than 50 nationalities. To say this school
is cosmopolitan would be an understatement.
The school has developed proprietary software to help decide what
students should learn and do. “All students are treated as
individuals and this is the way that education should be,” he
said.
The school isn’t cheap. There’s an annual fee of SFr140,000 –
clearly aimed at ultra-wealthy families, although Gademann argues
its approach could certainly be adopted across a much wider
population. Students are prepared for a variety of examination
forms, such as the International Baccalaureate, UK A-Levels and
the US Advanced Placement program.
Gademann warmed to the theme of the school’s “Art of Conflict”
course. “The course aims at educating future leaders in how
disagreements on all levels including politics, business and
personal relationships can help resolve issues, if approached
correctly and with the right measure of understanding and respect
for the other party.
“Conflict is innate to our species and can be destructive. At the
same time, avoiding conflict leads to unresolved issues that
potentially cause more harmful situations in the future. So how
do we strike the right balance?
“What I personally appreciate about this course is that the
outcome can immediately be applied by students in their personal
lives while they gain an understanding of a multitude of
conflicts and their outcomes on a global level, both from
an historic and contemporary point of view,” he
said.
Switzerland is home to a number of international schools: Ecole
d’Humanité; ENSR International School; ISSH International School
of Schaffhausen; Brillantmont International School; Lyceum
Alpinum Zuoz, and Leysin American School in Switzerland, to name
but a few. Many of them have the kind of eye-popping Alpine
scenery with which even the poshest British public school would
find hard to compete with.
The Alpine state competes with countries such as the US, the UK
and France for elite private schools. These countries dominate
the market in internationally recognised qualifications; the
International High School Diploma, International GCSEs/A-Levels,
International Baccalaureate and French Baccalaureate, for
example. The children of UHNW clients in the Middle East, Asia,
Latin America, Africa and the former Soviet Union attend these
places. The globalisation of high-end education has accelerated
the process, and arguably driven the upward march in
fees.
Institut auf dem Rosenberg is not just one of the most exclusive
international schools, judging by its price tag, but it also
appears to be one of the oldest, founded 132 years ago. Gademann
said the school is also trying to capture the culture of a
two-year start-up. But even with a focus on technology as an aid
to learning, it can never beat the benefits of “an excellent
teacher,” he said.
Going forward, Gademann predicts a bifurcation of universities
between those delivering great education – for a price – and a
lot of mediocre establishments not able to continue justifying
their fees. And he argues that there will be a premium for places
of learning that concentrate on stress problem-solving,
creativity and the ability to think across boundaries.
In short, such an outlook appears well calibrated to the needs of
young adults entrusted with running a family business or who want
to strike out on their own. And, in time, one must hope that the
qualities making this establishment so attractive will be
available to children everywhere, regardless of how much their
parents earn.