Four ways to find your flow.
Sport. Academics. Arts. Innovation. Not four departments. Four dimensions of the same education.

Sports
Where the body learns what the mind can't teach alone.
Sport here isn't a break from school. It's where Rayots discover what they're made of - resilience, collective effort, and the ability to lose well and show up the next day.
Skatepark
25M Swimming Pool
Climbing wall
200M track
Basketball
Football





The goal isn't to train athletes. It's to build people who know how to compete, lose, and come back.
Academics
Rigour without curiosity is just compliance. Raya teaches both.
The IB is the framework. Raya is what happens inside it - inquiry-led, discussion-heavy, and built around questions that don't always have a single right answer.
Transdisciplinary Inquiry
Global Perspectives
individuals & societies
Mathematical Logic
Language & Culture
Theory of knowledge





The best lesson here ends with a question nobody has fully answered yet.
Arts
Every Rayot is an artist. Most are still finding their medium.
The stage, the studio, the screen - spaces designed for expression to become a discipline, not just an outlet.
performing arts
visual arts
music
literature
film
creative writing





Expression is a discipline. Not an outlet.
Innovation
Design is how Rayots learn to think. Not as a skill, as a habit.
In practice, that means real materials, real constraints, and real problems.
The Atelier, robotics lab, and design studio are where the habit gets built - iterative, hands-on, and always asking whether it actually works.
atelier
design thinking
makerspace
robotics
entrepreneurship
3d printing





Build it. Test it. Break it. Build it again.

Not every student finds flow the same way.
The LEH is Raya's counselling and special educational needs department - specialists, dedicated spaces, and counselling pods built to feel more like a garden than a clinic. Mental wellness isn't a support service. It's part of how the school works.
Counselling
Special Educational Needs
Learner Support
Raya is easier to understand in person.
Book a tour and spend a morning on campus.
