Al Shola Private School - branch Industrial Area 13 logo

Al Shola Private School - branch Industrial Area 13Campus & Facilities in Industrial Area 13، Sharjah

Curriculum
Ministry of Education
SPEA
Good
Location
Sharjah, Industrial Area 13
Fees
AED 6K - 12K
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Campus & Facilities

Good
SPEA Inspection Rating (2023)
Improved from Weak in 2018 — among 17 UAE MoE curriculum schools in Sharjah, 7 are rated Good
AED 6,000–11,500
Annual Fee Range
Below the MoE curriculum average of AED 10,212 in Sharjah — lowest-fee tier in the market
1,289
Total Students on Campus
Single-campus boys school; student-to-teacher ratio of 1:19 vs city average of 1:13.6
2004
Year Established
Over 20 years old; building described as old in 2023 SPEA inspection report
Available
Technology Devices in Classrooms
Inspectors noted devices present but not used to full potential — flagged as area for improvement
Older School BuildingTech in ClassroomsAnti-Obesity ProgrammeSEN Support On-SiteStudent Council ActiveLow Fee Tier

Al Shola Private School - Branch Industrial Area 13 occupies a single campus in Sharjah's Industrial Area 13, serving 1,289 boys across Grades 5 to 12. The school was founded in 2004, and the SPEA inspection report is candid about the physical reality: the school building is noted as old, yet inspectors concluded that the learning environment generally supports student learning on an appropriate level. This is an honest baseline — functional, but not aspirational.

Detailed facility data is limited in publicly available records. Specific information on campus size, library provision, dedicated science laboratories, sports fields, dining facilities, and medical or wellbeing rooms has [MISSING: campus size in sqm or acres], [MISSING: number and specification of science labs], [MISSING: sports facilities detail beyond general physical education provision], and [MISSING: dining, medical, and library specifications]. What the inspection does confirm is that technology devices are generally available to students in classrooms — but inspectors specifically flagged that technology is not being used to its full potential in lessons, identifying this as a formal area for improvement.

For context on what families should expect: at fees ranging from AED 6,000 to AED 11,500 per year, Al Shola sits firmly at the lower end of the Sharjah private school market. Among UAE Ministry of Education curriculum schools in Sharjah, the average fee is approximately AED 10,212, placing Al Shola broadly in line with its peer group. At this fee level, parents should not expect premium facilities — purpose-built STEAM wings, swimming pools, or performance theatres are not a reasonable benchmark here. The relevant question is whether the environment is safe, functional, and adequate for learning — and on that measure, inspectors gave a qualified yes.

The school does operate an anti-obesity programme reflecting some attention to student wellbeing, and 21 students with special educational needs are supported on-site. A Student Council is active. The inspection noted that safeguarding arrangements are effective and that student welfare procedures have improved meaningfully since the previous cycle. Physical education facilities are referenced but not detailed. Arts, music, and computer studies are delivered as part of the curriculum, suggesting dedicated spaces exist, though their specification is unconfirmed.

The overarching picture is of a school where the physical environment is adequate rather than impressive — appropriate given the fee tier, but with clear room to grow, particularly in technology integration and research-enabling spaces. Families choosing Al Shola on academic or community grounds should do so with realistic expectations about facilities, and are encouraged to visit the campus directly to assess suitability for their son's needs.