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Providence English Private SchoolCampus & Facilities in Muwailih، Sharjah

Curriculum
British
SPEA
Good
Location
Sharjah, Muwailih
Fees
AED 14K - 28K
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Campus & Facilities

Good
SPEA Facilities & Resources Rating
Part of overall Good inspection judgment, 2024–25; consistent across two consecutive reviews
1,344
Students on Single Campus
Full through-school, ages 3–18, on one Muwailah Commercial site
AED 28,320
Highest Annual Fee
Well below the British curriculum median of AED 49,630 in Sharjah — a value-tier campus
5
Sports Disciplines Offered
Basketball, football, volleyball, athletics, cricket — compulsory participation for all students
Online Only
Library Provision
No physical library on record; digital-only access via LMS and online materials
Established 1990Compulsory SportOnline LibraryGoogle ClassroomValue Fee BandSingle Campus

Providence English Private School has operated from its single campus in Muwaileh Commercial, Sharjah, since 1990 — making it one of the more established British curriculum schools in the emirate. Campus size data is not publicly available, which limits a full physical assessment, but the school serves 1,344 students across ages 3 to 18 on a single site, suggesting a reasonably substantial footprint for a through-school of this scale.

Facilities data provided is limited. Sports provision includes basketball, football, volleyball, athletics, and cricket, and the school's own materials emphasise compulsory participation in sport — a positive structural commitment. However, specific details on court dimensions, field sizes, gymnasium capacity, or pool access are [MISSING: detailed sports facility specifications]. The school notes association with local sports clubs to supplement on-site provision, which may indicate that some facilities are shared or off-campus rather than purpose-built.

Academic facilities are similarly underdocumented. The school operates an online library rather than a physical library space, and technology infrastructure includes Google Classroom, Seesaw, an LMS portal, and online educational support materials — a functional but not exceptional digital toolkit. There is [MISSING: information on science laboratories, maker spaces, arts studios, performance spaces, early years facilities, dining arrangements, and on-site medical provision]. For a school enrolling 119 Phase 1 children, the absence of any published detail on early years environments is a notable gap for prospective parents of younger children.

The SPEA 2024–25 inspection rated the school's management of staffing, facilities, and resources as part of its overall Good judgment, with no specific facilities-related concerns flagged as priority areas for improvement. That said, inspectors did identify that Phase 1 teaching environments and provision for young learners require strengthening — a finding that indirectly points to questions about the adequacy of early years spaces and resources.

On the question of fee-to-facility value: at fees ranging from AED 13,890 to AED 28,320, PEPS sits well below the median for British curriculum schools in Sharjah, where the citywide median fee stands at AED 49,630. At this price point, parents should calibrate expectations accordingly — the facilities offering is consistent with a value-positioned school rather than a premium one. The absence of a physical library, limited published detail on specialist spaces, and reliance on third-party sports clubs all reflect a school operating at the more accessible end of the British curriculum fee spectrum. For families prioritising affordability within a Good-rated British curriculum environment, this is a reasonable trade-off; those seeking premium campus infrastructure should look at higher fee-band alternatives.