Al Kamal American Private International School- branch Al Ramtha logo

Al Kamal American Private International School- branch Al RamthaAmerican Curriculum, Subjects & Qualifications

Curriculum
American
SPEA
Good
Location
Sharjah, Al Ramtha
Fees
AED 9K - 40K
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Curriculum & Academics

Good
SPEA Inspection Rating (2023–24)
Improved from Acceptable in 2022–23; 22 of 42 American curriculum schools in Sharjah hold a Good rating
Outstanding
IBT ASL Arabic Benchmark Result
TALA (AFL) rated Good; Mubakkir rated Very Good — strongest results are in Arabic language subjects
1:17
Student-to-Teacher Ratio
Above the Sharjah city average of 1:13.6, meaning larger average class sizes than the norm
Acceptable
MAP Attainment — Primary Phase
MAP attainment rated Very Good in Middle, but below expectations in Primary — a flagged area for improvement
271 / 764
Emirati Students Enrolled
Emirati students represent approximately 35% of total enrolment — an unusually high proportion for an American curriculum school
American CCSS KG1–12AdvancED AccreditedSEN Inclusion SupportArabic AFL & ASLGood SPEA Rating9 Benchmark Assessments

Al Kamal American Private International School - Branch Al Ramtha delivers the US California Common Core State Standards (CCSS) across a full KG1 through Grade 12 continuum, making it one of 42 American curriculum schools in Sharjah — the second-largest curriculum group in the city after British schools. Instruction is conducted entirely in English, with Arabic taught as both a first language (Arabic as a First Language / AFL) and an additional language (Arabic as an Additional Language / ASL), serving the school's notably large Emirati cohort of 271 students out of 764 total. A dedicated SEN/Inclusion programme supports 15 students with identified special educational needs, with the 2024 inspection confirming that identification and support systems are now properly established.

The school's most recent SPEA School Performance Review, conducted 4–7 March 2024 across 138 lesson observations, awarded an overall effectiveness rating of Good — a meaningful step up from the Acceptable rating recorded in 2022–23. This places Al Kamal American School within the largest rating band among American curriculum schools in Sharjah, where 22 of 42 American curriculum schools hold a Good rating, with only 1 rated Outstanding. The improvement trajectory is a genuine positive signal for families, reflecting leadership's commitment to raising expectations and acting on prior recommendations.

Academic performance is uneven across phases and subjects. Inspectors rated achievement in Islamic education, Arabic (AFL and ASL), social studies, and other subjects (art, music, PE) as Good across all phases — clear strengths of the programme. External benchmark data reinforces this: TALA (AFL) results: Good; Mubakkir results: Very Good; IBT ASL results: Outstanding. KG provision was specifically highlighted as a strength, with children's early literacy and numeracy development rated Good. However, mathematics attainment was rated Acceptable in Primary and High, and science attainment was Acceptable in KG and Primary — a pattern that inspectors identified as a priority concern. English writing skills showed significant variation across Primary, Middle, and High phases.

The school's external assessment portfolio is notably broad for its fee band. Students participate in MAP (Measures of Academic Progress), CAT4, ACER IBT, TIMSS, PISA, PIRLS, SAT, PSAT, and EmSAT — a comprehensive suite that provides genuine international benchmarking data. MAP attainment was rated Acceptable in Primary and Very Good in Middle, offering a more granular picture than internal data alone. Inspectors noted that the school's internal assessment data consistently overstated attainment relative to what was observed in lessons, flagging the school's use of assessment information to improve achievement for all student groups as a key area requiring improvement. Technology integration is a visible feature of daily learning, with tablets used by students during lessons for accessing resources across subjects.

Compared to peer American curriculum schools in Sharjah, Al Kamal American School's academic profile reflects a school in genuine transition — having addressed prior weaknesses in KG provision and SEN identification, but still working to achieve consistent Good-or-better attainment in core subjects across all phases. The absence of a gifted and talented programme, vocational pathways, or bilingual dual-language track represents gaps relative to higher-performing schools in the same curriculum group. University destination data is not publicly available, limiting families' ability to assess senior school outcomes. The school's accreditation by AdvancED (Advanced ED) provides an external quality benchmark, though no additional international curriculum accreditations are held.