CambriLearn Partners With Virgin Active To Strengthen Student Wellbeing Beyond Online Learning
Written by: BizCommunity Editor Save to Instapaper
For CambriLearn, the South African online school running for almost two decades, the moment is not unexpected. Over its twenty years, the school has educated more than 80,000 students across over 100 countries. It currently offers six curriculum pathways: the British curriculum (International GCSE and A-Level), CAPS, IEB matric preparation, Pearson Edexcel, KABV, and US K-12. It is accredited by Cognia and Pearson Edexcel, registered with SACAI and IEB, and NCAA approved for student-athletes pursuing US university routes.
These credentials answer the academic side of what families need. The question parents still raise, often more carefully than they raise the academic one, is what happens to the social and physical part of their child's week once school no longer involves a campus. It is the question CambriLearn has been working on most intently for the past two years, and the new Virgin Active partnership announced this month is the most substantial answer the school has put in place so far.
Move More. Learn Better
The Virgin Active partnership, which went live on 29 May, is available only to CambriLearn students, parents and staff across South Africa, Botswana and Namibia. It has been structured specifically for the CambriLearn community and is not part of any wider Virgin Active programme.
What the partnership represents, from CambriLearn's side, is a structural piece of how the school operates. It is the school's deliberate move into the health, fitness and social environment that previously sat inside a school campus by default. Virgin Active's national network of clubs already functions as part of weekly routine for a large number of South African households, with children's facilities, supervised swimming, group training, racquet sports and family-friendly spaces that work for parents, students and siblings being active together. Bringing that environment formally inside the school's offering, available across three countries, builds something that lesson delivery alone cannot.
The partnership's throughline "Move More. Learn Better." is grounded in research the school takes seriously. Physical activity has well-established effects on cognitive performance, attention and emotional wellbeing in school-age children. Building reliable physical activity into a child's week without depending on a campus to do it has been one of the longest-running practical challenges of online schooling. A national network of clubs that families would in many cases already be considering for health and social reasons turned out to be the right structure for solving it at scale.
CambriLearn's framing of the partnership treats it as part of how the school is built, not as a perk added on top. The conviction underneath is that schooling at home does not work as well as it should if it is treated only as academic delivery. Movement, social connection and the routines that surround the academic week have to be part of the same offering. The Virgin Active partnership is the most visible piece of that work to date, with further partnerships expected over the course of 2026.
Why this matters now
The families currently moving from campus-based private schools to CambriLearn are doing so for reasons that have shifted over the past five years. Affordability is the headline driver but the underlying decision sits closer to value. The R400,000-a-year fee structure at the top end of South African private schooling is, for a growing number of households, no longer aligned with what they are actually being asked to pay for. The international qualifications and university pathways that justified those fees are now obtainable through online routes that did not exist with this credibility a decade ago. The part the campus traditionally added on top, the social and physical layer of school life, is the work the partnership programme is now doing.
Parents coming to CambriLearn in 2026 are looking for a working version of the school week their child can grow up inside, one that uses the credentials and technology of the present without losing the parts of childhood that have nothing to do with academics. The Virgin Active partnership is structured to be one piece of that.
What this signals for the sector
CambriLearn's position in South African online schooling has shifted in the past three years. Where the school was once treated as an option for families who could not access the traditional private route, it is increasingly the option chosen by families who can but who have stopped wanting to pay for the campus-based version. The partnership programme signals where competition in the sector is going. The lesson delivery and curriculum layer is, by 2026, broadly mature across credible online schools. What separates them now is the environment built around the lessons, and how seriously the school takes the work of constructing that environment for the families it serves.
Families wanting to understand whether CambriLearn fits their child's pathway can book a consultation at cambrilearn.com.
Get new press articles by email
We submit and automate press releases distribution for a range of clients. Our platform brings in automation to 5 social media platforms with engaging hashtags. Our new platform The Pulse, allows premium PR Agencies to have access to our newsletter subscribers.
Latest from
- New Vineyard Technologies Recognised For Boosting Productivity And Reducing Environmental Impact
- Lesotho Advances Renewable Energy Ambitions With Plans To Assess Floating Solar On Key Dams
- Why Human Oversight Must Be The Cornerstone Of Every Responsible AI Policy In South African Business
- Organisations See Better Outcomes When Engagement Drives Change Instead Of Delivering Messages
- Women Are Shaping The Future Of South African Dairy From Farms To Executive Leadership Roles Helen McDougall Champions Recognition Of Women Driving Progress Across South Africa’s Dairy Industry
- South Africa Records First National Pet Ownership Data In Major Milestone For Animal Welfare
- Online MCom And New PGCE Launch To Address Leadership And Teacher Development Demands
- Growing Calls For Stronger Bereavement Leave Policies In South African Workplaces
- Santam Syndicate 1918 Appoints Sam Geddes As Chief Executive Officer
- AI And Learning Innovation Set To Reshape Africa’s Global Workforce Competitiveness
- Helm Highlights Intellectual Property Risks As Organisations Expand AI Capabilities
- Atlantic Seaboard Buyers See Returns Driven By Asset Selection Not Market Momentum
- Portfolio Committee On Health Marks National Cancer Survivor Day With Renewed Commitment
- News24 And Netwerk24 Introduce All That And Alles For Informed Consumer Choices
- Economic Challenges Intensify As South Africans Confront Higher Prices And Interest Rates
The Pulse Latest Articles
- You Can’t Measure What You Can’t Define – Or Can You? (part 3 Of 5) (June 2, 2026)
- South African Women Are Missing This Essential Nutrient (May 20, 2026)
- Opinion Piece: Rethinking Performance: Why Behaviour Remains The Missing Link In Evaluation (May 20, 2026)
- 125 Years Of Hansgrohe And The Designers Who Made Axor A Luxury Language (May 19, 2026)
- World Whisky Day: Whisky Lovers Challenged To Stop Saving Their Best Bottles (May 15, 2026)
