Soon after, she joined the Diocesan Girls’ School in Hong Kong where she established the A Level Mathematics Department. She also played the flute in two orchestras in Hong Kong. After four years in Asia, Mrs Moir returned to England where she worked as an IBM systems analyst in the City of London working on networks for some of the major international banks In 1982, she came to Sri Lanka, with her husband, Kesang Tenduf-La, and three children, Tashi, Sonam and Chhimi, and founded the Colombo International School. Using the British curriculum and offering London O and A Level examinations, its main clientele was Sri Lankan parents who would otherwise have sent their children overseas to be educated. The fees were very modest and the doors were opened once again for Sri Lankan students to have a first-class English medium education. The school also managed to get the British Examination Departments to set O and A Level Sinhala examinations. During the unrest of the late 1980s, CIS continued to operate, with classes being held in different homes, fuelled by Mrs Moir’s desire to demonstrate to her students that their education should not be sacrificed to circumstance. In 1990, Mrs Moir was requested by President Premadasa to run a multimedia English language programme on television and radio to give the rural people an equal opportunity to learn the English language that their counterparts in the towns enjoyed. She invited Barbara Goldsmith, a former Head of BBC English, to work with her. Her team bought the hugely successful English language programme ‘Follow Me’ from the BBC and used this with introductions in Sinhala and Tamil on the state radio and television at prime time. They had 80 language centres across the country from Jaffna in the North to Matara in the South, and held written and spoken English examinations set by the University of Warwick. She then moved on to found the British School in Colombo in 1994. She put together a group of trustees that included Lord Jack Butterworth, the first Vice Chancellor of Warwick University, Sir Frank Layfield QR and Dr Alistair Smith, the Overseas Representative of Aberdeen University. Mrs Moir was then persuaded by a group of parents to start the Elizabeth Moir School in 1996. The school has enjoyed enormous academic success, quoted in The Daily Telegraph as having the third best IGCSE results outside of the UK in 2012. Later in 2015 her A Level students achieved 38% A* grades and in 2016 64% of all papers at IGCSE were given A* grades which placed them ahead of their former rivals. Elizabeth Moir School places great emphasis on sports and the arts. In addition all students in the school are committed to community service projects. Mrs Moir is particularly involved with Sri Lanka Unites, a group that hopes to bring together youth from different communities, post-war. She is committed to moulding global citizens Mrs Moir’s past students have gone on to universities such as Oxford, Cambridge, LSE, UCL and Imperial College in the UK and to Harvard, Yale, MIT, Stanford, Cornell, Chicago, University of Pennsylvania, and Princeton in America.