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Sharjah English School (SES) is a British-curriculum school in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates (UAE). It is one of the oldest private, not for profit , coeducational schools in the UAE. It currently has an enrollment of 850 students across primary and secondary (ages 3-18).
The school was officially opened in 2005 and offers classes from KG - to Gr. 12. It is an American curriculum school and started with 60 students and a small staff. The school building is located off the main Sharjah to Dubai highway - Sheikh Mohammed Bin Zayed Road - to the east of the city in the Mirdif/Al Warqa area.
Al Mawakeb Schools - Al Barsha, Al Garhoud, Al Khawaneej; American Academy in Al-Mizhar; American School of Dubai; Al Salam Private School; Arab Unity School
DPS Academy (in Arabic: أكاديمية د ب س) (previously known as Union International Indian School) was a private Indian school in Dubai International Academic City, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates which is affiliated to ICSE curriculum, Delhi.
Sharjah Indian School is a senior secondary school in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates, having approximately 13,937 students and 588 teachers. [1] It is owned and managed by Indian Association Sharjah, located in the United Arab Emirates. [2] It expanded in 2016 to a new building in the Juwaiza area of Sharjah near Sajaa. [3]
Sharjah American International School, DUBAI; Location; ... Private school: ... Age: 3 to 10 (18 in 2011) Colour(s) Blue The Sharjah American International School, ...
The British and Indian curricula alone account for 64% of all enrollment in Dubai-based private schools. [7] Tuition at these private schools range from AED 1,725 to AED 107,200 per year, [8] and Dubai's annual revenue from private schooling fees is AED 5.35bn. 39% of students pay less than AED 10,000 in tuition per year. [9]
The school was affiliated with the Delhi Public School Society from its inception in 2000 until 2017, [9] when the Delhi Private School (DPS) Group (which owns DPS Sharjah and DPS Dubai) decided not to renew its contracts with the society in response to a fee hike, saying that it did not want to inflict any financial burden on families.