Note: This image is an illustrative image created to visually represent the content of this article. It is not an actual photograph of a school event.
What I Felt Through My Visit to OWIS Osaka
For international families relocating to Osaka, choosing the right home is only one part of building a new life.
A comfortable furnished residence, a convenient location, reliable cleaning support, and daily living assistance are all important. However, for families with children, the school environment is just as important as housing.
At DIOS, we support expatriates, diplomats, and international families living in Osaka by providing furnished residences and practical daily life support. Through this work, we have learned that a family’s sense of security in a new city depends not only on the quality of the residence, but also on schools, community, and the wellbeing of children.
Recently, I had the opportunity to visit One World International School Osaka, commonly known as OWIS Osaka. I attended the school carnival and was later invited as a special guest to the OWIS Osaka Advancement Ceremony. I also had the opportunity to meet with Head of School Greg Culos, Deputy Head Eric, and members of the OWIS Osaka team.
This article is not written as an academic evaluation of a school. Rather, it is a personal observation based on my actual visit, as someone who works closely with international families relocating to Osaka.
A School Community That Felt Warm and International
What impressed me most about OWIS Osaka was something that cannot be fully understood from brochures or websites alone.
It was the atmosphere of the school.
At both the carnival and the Advancement Ceremony, I felt a warm, open, and positive school community. The students looked energetic, confident, and comfortable in their school environment. The teachers and staff appeared sincerely engaged in supporting the children, not only academically, but also emotionally and socially.
During the Advancement Ceremony, the students’ progress, achievements, and growth were celebrated in front of their families, teachers, and the wider school community. It was not only a formal school event. It felt like a celebration of each child’s effort, confidence, individuality, and development.
For families relocating from overseas, this kind of school atmosphere is extremely important.
When children move to a new country, they must adjust to a new school, a new language environment, new friends, new routines, and a new culture. If children feel welcomed and supported at school, the entire family can settle into life in Osaka with greater confidence.
Why School Choice Matters for Expatriate Families
For expatriate families, school choice is often one of the most important factors when deciding where to live.
Parents naturally ask many practical questions before relocating:
Where should we live?
How long will the commute be?
Is the area safe and convenient?
Will daily life be manageable?
Most importantly, will our children be happy and well supported?
Housing and education are deeply connected.
A good residence provides stability.
A good school provides confidence.
Together, they help an international family build a real life in a new city.
This is why DIOS believes that international schools are not only educational institutions. For a global city, they are essential social infrastructure.
Osaka Also Has Strong International School Options
In the Kansai region, some international families have traditionally looked toward Kobe and Rokko Island when considering long-established international schools. Those schools have history, reputation, and a strong place within the international community.
However, Osaka is also developing strong international school options of its own.
From my visit to OWIS Osaka, I felt that the school is becoming a very meaningful option for families who wish to live, work, and raise children in Osaka.
For families whose professional life is centered in Osaka, the ability to live in Osaka and send children to a strong international school nearby can make daily life much easier. It can reduce commuting burdens, make school events more accessible, and help the entire family feel more connected to the city.
I do not believe that schools should be discussed only in terms of rankings or simple comparisons. Each school has its own history, culture, strengths, and educational philosophy.
However, through my actual visit, I felt that OWIS Osaka is not merely an alternative option. For some international families living in Osaka, it may become a very attractive first-choice school.
An International School with a Truly Global Atmosphere
One point that was particularly impressive to me was the international atmosphere of the school’s leadership and operations.
In some international schools, the teachers and principal may be international, while the administrative culture and decision-making may still feel strongly influenced by local Japanese school values. This is not necessarily negative, as Japanese educational culture has many strengths, including discipline, responsibility, and respect for order.
However, at OWIS Osaka, I felt that the school community itself was more naturally international.
The atmosphere seemed open to diversity, different cultures, and different ways of learning. The school did not feel like a Japanese school simply offering English instruction. Rather, it felt like an international learning community located in Osaka.
For global families, this distinction can be very important.
The Value of Diversity and Belonging
Japanese schools have many strengths: discipline, perseverance, group responsibility, and strong Japanese language foundations. These are important values, and they should not be dismissed.
At the same time, international schools can offer a different kind of educational environment.
At OWIS Osaka, I felt a strong sense that diversity was not treated as a challenge, but as a source of value. Students from different backgrounds seemed to be part of one shared school community. The ceremony gave me the impression that each child’s growth and individuality were being recognized and encouraged.
For children growing up in a global environment, this sense of belonging is extremely important.
Education is not only about subjects and exams. It is also about confidence, identity, communication, respect, and the ability to live with people from different backgrounds.
The Importance of Mother Tongue and Identity
As international education becomes more popular, it is also important to remember the value of a child’s mother tongue.
For Japanese children attending international schools, English is extremely valuable. However, Japanese should not be neglected. For children from other countries, their own native language and cultural identity are also very important.
Whether the language is Japanese, English, Hindi, French, Arabic, Korean, Chinese, or another language, a child’s mother tongue is closely connected to emotional development, logical thinking, cultural identity, and deeper expression.
A good international education should not simply replace one language or culture with another. It should help children respect their own roots while also learning to understand others.
This balance is especially important for global families living in Japan.
A School Open to the Local Community
Another point I appreciated about OWIS Osaka was that the school did not feel closed off from the surrounding community.
International schools can sometimes appear distant from local Japanese society. Because tuition fees are often high, some local residents may imagine them as schools only for wealthy families or foreign communities.
However, from what I observed, OWIS Osaka seemed to be trying to become part of the wider Osaka community.
The school carnival and ceremony gave me the impression that OWIS Osaka values openness, connection, and community. This is important not only for the school, but also for Osaka as a city.
A truly international city is not a place where foreign communities and local communities remain separate. It is a place where people meet, understand each other, and live together with mutual respect.
Growth in a Short Period of Time
OWIS Osaka is still a relatively new international school in Osaka. However, I understand that within about three years, it has grown into a school community of approximately 400 students.
This growth is meaningful.
An international school cannot be built only with buildings and curriculum. It becomes a real school when parents trust it, children attend happily, teachers work with dedication, and a school community develops over time.
The growth of OWIS Osaka suggests that there is strong demand for international education in Osaka, and that many families see value in what the school is creating.
Leadership, Teamwork, and Dedication
In many international schools, teachers may be on relatively short-term contracts. This is common in the international school world, and it does not mean that the quality of education is low. However, it can sometimes be challenging for a school to build a strong long-term identity and sense of belonging among staff.
At OWIS Osaka, I felt a strong sense of teamwork and dedication among the leadership and staff.
Greg Culos, Eric, and the OWIS Osaka team appeared deeply committed to developing the school, supporting the students, and building a strong school community in Osaka.
From what I observed, one of the most important strengths of OWIS Osaka is not only its curriculum or facilities, but the people who are working hard to build the school.
A school’s true value is not found only in its brochure.
It is found in the people who care for the children every day.
Schools as Part of Osaka’s International Infrastructure
Osaka is becoming increasingly international.
As more companies, diplomatic missions, international professionals, and global families come to Osaka, the city will need more than offices, hotels, and business facilities.
It will need a complete living environment for international families.
That includes quality housing, reliable daily life support, medical access, community networks, and strong school options for children.
In this sense, schools such as OWIS Osaka play an important role in Osaka’s future. They help make Osaka a city where international families can not only work, but also live, learn, and belong.
A Personal Observation from DIOS
At DIOS, we provide furnished residences and living support for international residents in Osaka. Through our work, we often see how important the first few months in Japan can be for a family.
When housing, school, and daily life are well supported, families can begin their life in Osaka with confidence.
When children are happy at school, parents can focus more easily on their work and responsibilities.
My visit to OWIS Osaka reminded me that supporting international families is not only about providing a residence. It is also about helping families feel that Osaka can become a real home.
Closing Thoughts
I am not in a position to rank schools or to say that one school is absolutely better than another. Each school has its own strengths, culture, history, and educational philosophy.
However, after visiting OWIS Osaka, attending its carnival and Advancement Ceremony, and meeting with its leadership and staff, I felt strongly that Osaka now has a very attractive international school option for global families.
OWIS Osaka has a warm atmosphere, energetic students, caring teachers, and a leadership team that appears deeply committed to building a strong international school community in Osaka.
For global families considering life in Osaka, I believe it is worth looking carefully at the international school options within Osaka itself.
Housing, school, daily life support, and community are all connected.
When these elements come together, Osaka becomes not only a place to work, but a place where international families can live with comfort, confidence, and peace of mind.