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Hartland International SchoolBritish Curriculum, Subjects & Qualifications

Curriculum
British / International Baccalaureate
KHDA
Very Good
Location
Dubai, Sobha Hartland
Fees
AED 49K - 93K
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Curriculum & Academics

Outstanding
BSO Accreditation (2022 & 2025)
Dual Outstanding rating from the UK Government-recognised British Schools Overseas inspectorate
Very Good
KHDA Overall Rating (2023–24)
Sustained across 5 consecutive inspection cycles; only 48 of 233 Dubai schools hold this rating
Outstanding
Curriculum Design & Implementation
Rated Outstanding across all phases — Foundation Stage through Post-16 — in KHDA 2023–24
1:11
Student-Teacher Ratio
Significantly better than the Dubai private school average of 1:13.6
100+
Co-Curricular Activities
Included within tuition fees; students spend up to 4 hours per week on enrichment
British EYFS to A-LevelBSO OutstandingHPL FrameworkGifted & Talented (NACE)BTEC Sixth FormSEND & EAL Provision

Hartland International School follows the National Curriculum for England (NCFE) from FS1 through to Year 13, making it a fully all-through British school. The framework progresses through EYFS in the Foundation Stage, Key Stages 1 and 2 in Primary, Key Stage 3 in Years 7–9, GCSE/IGCSE in Years 10–11, and A-Level and BTEC qualifications in the Sixth Form. Among 105 British curriculum schools in Dubai — the largest curriculum group in the city — Hartland sits firmly in the upper tier, holding a KHDA 'Very Good' rating sustained across five consecutive inspection cycles since 2017–18, and a dual BSO (British Schools Overseas) Outstanding accreditation awarded in both 2022 and April 2025.

The school's most distinctive academic feature is the school-wide embedding of High Performance Learning (HPL), a research-based framework that aims to develop advanced cognitive and values-based behaviours in every student from Foundation Stage to Sixth Form. This is not a bolt-on enrichment programme but a structural philosophy woven into lesson design, teacher training, and assessment practice. Hartland is also accredited by NACE (the National Association for Able Children in Education), underpinning its More-Able, Gifted and Talented Programme. Inclusion provision covers SEND/Inclusion and EAL support, with 56 students of determination on roll at the time of the most recent inspection. The school does not currently offer a bilingual or dual-language track, nor a vocational pathway beyond BTEC at Sixth Form level.

On academic performance, the KHDA 2023–24 inspection rated curriculum design and implementation as Outstanding across all phases — the highest possible finding in this domain. Student achievement in English, mathematics, and science is rated Very Good across Foundation Stage, Primary, Secondary, and Post-16, with English progress in the Foundation Stage rated Outstanding. The inspection confirmed that internal assessments accurately reflect external benchmark results across Years 2–10, and that A-Level results in Year 13 are very good. Specific grade-level data — such as GCSE A*–A percentages or A-Level A*–B pass rates — are [MISSING: school has not published subject-level exam results publicly]. University destination data is similarly [MISSING: no published statistics on Russell Group or other university placement rates].

Beyond the core curriculum, Hartland integrates over 100 co-curricular clubs and enrichment activities within tuition fees, with students spending up to four hours per week on enrichment. The Duke of Edinburgh's International Award and Junior Duke Award provide structured personal development pathways. Performing arts are treated as a genuine academic strand, supported by a 650-seat professional theatre and a dedicated recording studio. The KHDA inspection rated students' personal development and social responsibility as Outstanding across all phases — a finding that reflects the school's integration of co-curricular and academic life.

Inspectors and reviewers have, however, identified clear areas requiring attention. Achievement in Islamic Education and Arabic remains at Acceptable across all phases, with Arabic First Language attainment rated Weak in Secondary and Post-16 — a persistent gap relative to the school's otherwise strong academic profile. The KHDA flagged that teachers do not consistently use assessment data to match learning activities to individual student needs, and that mathematical reasoning in FS and Primary requires improvement. Reading literacy, measured through NGRT assessments, shows progress but the strategy is not yet fully embedded. Governance was rated Good rather than Very Good, with inspectors noting that governors do not yet fulfil a sufficiently critical oversight role. Compared to peer British curriculum schools in Dubai that hold Outstanding KHDA ratings — 18 of Dubai's 23 Outstanding-rated schools follow the British curriculum — Hartland's path to the top rating appears contingent on resolving these teaching consistency and Arabic provision gaps.