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Global English SchoolPrincipal & Leadership Team

Curriculum
British
ADEK
Acceptable
Location
Al Ain, Manasir
Fees
AED 14K - 27K
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Leadership & Governance

Good
Leadership & Governance Rating
Improved from Acceptable in 2021–22; governance also upgraded to Good in 2024–25 inspection
1:13
Student-Teacher Ratio
Slightly better than the city index average of 1:13.6 for British curriculum schools
84
Teaching Staff
Plus 14 teaching assistants supporting 954 students across KG to Grade 12
Good
Parent & Community Partnership
Rated Good by inspectors; school uses Class Dojo, open houses, and reading events to engage families
1982
Year Founded
One of Al Ain's earliest private schools; over 40 years of continuous community presence
Good Leadership RatingGovernance ImprovedIndependent School40+ Nationalities14 Teaching AssistantsEst. 1982

Global English School is led by Principal Viswanathan Nanoo, whose tenure details are [MISSING: principal appointment date not available in sources]. The school was founded in 1982 by Chairman Mr. P K Mohamed Ansari, who remains an active figurehead, and GES operates as an independent school — not affiliated with a larger operator group. The continuity of founding leadership provides an unusual degree of institutional stability for a school of this age and size.

The 2024–25 Irtiqaa inspection rated leadership effectiveness as Good, a rating maintained across three consecutive indicators: effectiveness of leadership, self-evaluation and improvement planning, and partnerships with parents and the community. Notably, governance improved from Acceptable to Good since the previous inspection, driven by the appointment of an academic advisor to the School Governing Body to act as a liaison officer between senior leaders and the board. The governing body itself includes a democratically elected Head Boy and Head Girl — a meaningful signal of student voice embedded at the highest level of school governance. Inspectors noted that leaders have a clear vision for excellence, effectively shared with parents and embedded in school development plans. However, the inspection also recommended that the school embed its recently implemented distributed leadership model more firmly to strengthen accountability across all leadership levels — an area still in development.

On staffing, GES employs 84 teachers across a student body of 954 students, producing a student-to-teacher ratio of 1:13. This compares favourably to the average ratio of 1:13.6 across British curriculum schools in the city index, suggesting class sizes are slightly smaller than the norm for this curriculum type. The school also employs 14 teaching assistants, adding meaningful classroom support capacity. Teacher nationalities are predominantly from the Philippines, India, and Egypt. [MISSING: staff qualification percentages — no data on Masters-level or higher qualifications available in sources]. The inspection noted that management, staffing, facilities and resources improved from Acceptable to Good, reflecting considerable board investment since the previous inspection cycle.

Staff wellbeing is formally recognised — the school published a dedicated Staff Wellbeing Policy in October 2024 — though [MISSING: staff retention or turnover data not cited in inspection or school sources]. Teaching quality was rated Good in KG, Cycle 1, and Cycle 3, with Cycle 2 remaining Acceptable — an area the inspection flagged for improvement, particularly around critical thinking, problem-solving, and the consistency of written feedback to students.

Parent engagement is a documented strength. The school uses Class Dojo for ongoing communication, holds frequent open houses, parent workshops, and consultation meetings, and actively invites parents into learning events such as storytelling sessions, book fairs, and the creative "Books Restaurant" reading event. The inspection rated partnerships with parents and the community as Good. The school's community is diverse, drawing students from over 40 nationalities, with Sudanese, Egyptian, and Pakistani students forming the largest groups among a roll that includes 55 Emirati students. This multicultural environment, combined with a founding ethos now spanning more than four decades, gives GES a distinctive community character within Al Ain's British curriculum landscape.