Al Andalus Private Academy logo

Al Andalus Private Academy

Curriculum
Ministry of Education
ADEK Rating
Very Good
Location
Al Ain, Al Falaj Hazzaa
Annual Fees
AED 9K - 19K

Al Andalus Private Academy

The Executive Summary

Al Andalus Private Academy Al Ain is a co-educational MoE (UAE) curriculum school serving KG1 through Grade 12 in the Al Falaj Hazzaa district of Al Ain. Rated ADEK rating Very Good in the November 2025 Irtiqa inspection, the academy enrolls approximately 1,493 students and operates at some of the most accessible school fees Al Ain families will find in the private sector, ranging from AED 5,890 for KG1 to AED 14,470 for Grades 11 and 12. For Arab-background families - the largest nationality groups are Jordanian, Syrian, and Egyptian - seeking a structured, values-driven Arabic and Islamic education within the Al Falaj Hazzaa schools corridor, this academy presents a genuinely compelling option. Its strongest academic performances are in Islamic Education (Very Good across all cycles, Outstanding at Grade 12 MoE external exams) and Arabic as a First Language (Very Good across all cycles), and its TIMSS 2023 Grade 4 mathematics score of 551 sits comfortably above the international average of 503. These are real achievements at a fee point that undercuts most Al Ain private competitors by a significant margin.
ADEK Very Good 2025MoE UAE CurriculumFees from AED 5,8901,493 Students EnrolledTIMSS Above International Average

The school has a strong sense of community and the teachers genuinely know my children. The Islamic values education is excellent and the fees are very reasonable for the quality we receive.

Year 7 Parent(representative)

Academic Framework & Learning Style

Al Andalus Private Academy follows the UAE Ministry of Education (MoE) curriculum across all cycles from KG through Grade 12, with Arabic as the primary language of instruction for core subjects and English taught as a key second language. The curriculum is structured around the national framework with meaningful cross-subject integration, and the school's internal assessment data consistently shows attainment above MoE curriculum standards in Islamic Education and Arabic as a First Language across every cycle. The 2025 Irtiqa report confirms that Grade 12 MoE external exam results indicate Outstanding attainment in both Islamic Education and Arabic as a First Language - a headline result that parents of older students should note carefully. The academic picture becomes more nuanced when external benchmarks are applied. The school uses the ACER-IBT (Australian Council for Educational Research, International Benchmark Test) for Grades 3 to 9 in Arabic, mathematics, and science. Results for AY2024/25 reveal a split performance: attainment in Arabic, mathematics, and science is rated Weak in Cycles 1 and 2 on this external measure, while Cycle 3 scores Very Good in Arabic and mathematics and Outstanding in science. This divergence between strong internal results and weaker external benchmarking in the lower and middle cycles is the school's most significant academic challenge and one that the ADEK inspectors have explicitly flagged for improvement. In PISA 2022, 15-year-old students scored 444 in reading literacy (below the international average of 476), 459 in mathematical literacy (below the international average of 472), and 451 in scientific literacy (below the international average of 485). These results are below both school targets and international norms, indicating that while older students perform strongly on the UAE national curriculum, their readiness for internationally benchmarked analytical tasks requires development. By contrast, TIMSS 2023 results are more encouraging: Grade 4 mathematics achieved 551 (above the international average of 503 and above the school's own target of 530), Grade 8 mathematics achieved 526 (above the international average of 478), Grade 4 science achieved 547 (above the international average of 494), and Grade 8 science achieved 541 (above the international average of 478). These TIMSS results represent a genuine strength and suggest that the school's foundational science and mathematics teaching in the primary and lower secondary years is internationally competitive. In terms of learning style, the Irtiqa report describes teaching as Very Good in KG, Cycle 1, and Cycle 3, with Good in Cycle 2. Lessons are characterized by strong student engagement, positive classroom behavior, and growing use of technology particularly in Cycle 3 where AI tools are becoming more established. Critical thinking and independent inquiry are developing but remain inconsistent across subject areas and cycles. Assessment is rated Good across all cycles, with inspectors noting that teachers need to use assessment information more precisely to guide next steps. Feedback quality and consistency are identified improvement areas. For students of determination, curriculum adaptation is rated Good, with established provision for gifted and talented learners, though more consistent modification is required for SEN students. EAL provision is not separately detailed in the inspection data, which reflects the Arabic-dominant student body. University pathway support is confirmed as active, with the school providing guidance and partnerships to support students' transitions to higher education - the homepage references partnerships with UAE University of Aviation and Abu Dhabi University competitions, suggesting real engagement with post-18 destinations.
Outstanding
Grade 12 MoE Exam - Islamic Education & Arabic
AY2024/25 external results
551
TIMSS 2023 Grade 4 Maths Score
Above international average of 503
541
TIMSS 2023 Grade 8 Science Score
Above international average of 478
444
PISA 2022 Reading Literacy Score
Below international average of 476 - area for growth

Extracurricular Activities (ECAs)

The school's extracurricular profile is modest in publicly documented breadth but shows clear evidence of meaningful competitive achievement, particularly in sport. The school homepage highlights that Al Andalus students won gold in the Abu Dhabi Football Championship (Under-17 category), which is a tangible competitive result that speaks to the quality of the sports program. The school also congratulates students on winning the Abu Dhabi Sports Games football tournament, indicating consistent performance at city-level competition. These are not participation certificates - they are championship wins, and for families where competitive sport matters, this is worth noting. The Irtiqa report references social responsibility and innovation skills as Good across all cycles, with students actively participating in enterprise, environmental, and community projects. Community partnerships are noted as a leadership strength, suggesting the school connects students to real-world contexts beyond the classroom. The homepage references engagement with the UAE Red Crescent and participation in national competitions including those organized by Abu Dhabi University and UAE University of Aviation, indicating that academic enrichment programs extend to university-linked competitions. In terms of reading and literacy enrichment, the school runs initiatives including 'Read with Me', 'My Book and I', and 'Read for Two Minutes', alongside participation in local and national reading contests. Cultural reading events such as 'Reading Without Borders' and 'I Love My Arabic Language' add a literary dimension to extracurricular life. The school also hosts book fairs and visits from Emirati authors, which enriches the cultural calendar. The school maintains two libraries (separate boys' and girls' facilities) and has introduced a new electronic library with digital stories accessible to both students and parents. Performing arts, music, and drama programs are not detailed in available source material, which represents a gap in the publicly available picture. Parents seeking a school with a strong performing arts or Duke of Edinburgh-style program should seek direct clarification from the school. Overall, the ECA offering appears strongest in sport and community engagement, with academic enrichment developing steadily.
Gold
Abu Dhabi Football Championship (U-17)
City-level competitive achievement
Abu Dhabi Football ChampionsUAE Red Crescent PartnershipReading Without BordersUniversity Competition ParticipantsDual Library Provision

Pastoral Care & Well-being

The pastoral and welfare framework at Al Andalus Private Academy is one of its most consistently praised dimensions in the ADEK 2025 Irtiqa inspection. Health and safety, including child protection and safeguarding, is rated Very Good across KG and all cycles - the highest possible rating in this category - reflecting strong safety systems, systematic risk assessments, regular fire and evacuation drills, and effective supervision throughout the school day. The inspectors describe a positive safeguarding culture, which is a meaningful endorsement for parents evaluating the school's duty of care. Student behavior is highlighted as a genuine school strength. The Irtiqa report states that students behave and cooperate well, are supportive of one another, and create a productive school environment. Personal development is rated Very Good across all cycles, reflecting students' respectful behavior, self-discipline, and sense of responsibility. This is not a rote observation - it is evidenced through classroom observations across four cycles of schooling. The school's ethos is clearly grounded in Islamic values, with Emirati culture and world cultures integrated into daily school life, though the cultural awareness dimension is rated Good rather than Very Good, suggesting room for deeper global citizenship development. Care and support of students is rated Good across all cycles, with the school maintaining effective systems for monitoring wellbeing, providing personal and academic guidance, and supporting students' pathways to higher education through partnerships and targeted assistance. Dedicated counselling provision is not separately detailed in available source material, but the inspection confirms that student wellbeing monitoring systems are in place and functional. The school does not appear to operate a formal house system based on available data, though student voice and leadership opportunities are referenced in the context of governance improvements, with the governing body now more representative through increased staff, student, and parent involvement. For families prioritizing a school where their child will feel safe, respected, and part of a cohesive community, Al Andalus Private Academy's pastoral record is reassuring. The combination of Very Good safeguarding and Very Good personal development across all age groups is a strong foundation.

My children feel safe and respected at this school. The teachers know each student personally and the Islamic values embedded in daily life make it feel like an extension of our home environment.

Grade 5 Parent(representative)

Campus & Facilities

Al Andalus Private Academy is located at 7 Ghabat Ghiyathi Street, Falaj Hazza', Al Ain - a residential district in the eastern part of Al Ain city. The Al Falaj Hazzaa area is a predominantly Arabic-speaking community with good road access and is well-served by the school's own bus network. The campus serves a school of nearly 1,500 students across KG through Grade 12, which is a substantial enrollment for a single site. The ADEK 2025 Irtiqa report notes that management, staffing, facilities, and resources are rated Very Good, reflecting steadily improving physical infrastructure. However, inspectors also flag that further investment in resources and consistent use of educational technology remain priorities, indicating that while the campus meets operational standards, it has not yet reached the facility richness of higher-fee private schools in the region. The report specifically recommends enhancing learning spaces, classroom resources, and technology to support collaboration and independence. The school maintains two separate libraries - one for boys and one for girls - with books categorized by genre, language, and subject, and dedicated Arabic and English sections. The Irtiqa report notes that while Arabic texts are extensive, English reading texts are limited, and student access to the libraries is not yet governed by a planned weekly timetable, particularly for Cycles 1 and 2. A new electronic library has been introduced, providing digital stories accessible to students and parents, which partially addresses the access limitation. Science laboratory provision is referenced in the context of Cycle 3 science regression, with inspectors noting fewer opportunities for practical laboratory work - suggesting that lab facilities exist but are not being utilized to their full potential. Technology infrastructure is described as developing, with digital resources in use and AI tools becoming more established in Cycle 3, though consistent use of educational technology across all cycles remains a stated improvement target. Specific details on campus size, sports fields, auditorium, swimming pool, and maker spaces are not confirmed in available source data.
1,493
Students on Roll
KG1 through Grade 12, co-educational
Very Good
ADEK Facilities & Resources Rating
Irtiqa 2025 - Management, Staffing, Facilities
Al Falaj Hazzaa LocationDual-Gender LibrariesElectronic Library AccessSchool Bus NetworkVery Good Facilities Rating

Teaching & Learning Quality

The ADEK 2025 Irtiqa inspection provides a detailed picture of teaching quality across the school's four cycles. Teaching for effective learning is rated Very Good in KG, Cycle 1, and Cycle 3, and Good in Cycle 2 - a profile that is broadly positive but highlights a consistency gap in the middle school years. The inspection notes that in the strongest cycles, teachers plan well-structured lessons, use questioning effectively, and build strong student-teacher relationships that support confident participation. In Cycle 2, the primary development need is greater differentiation to ensure all students receive support that closely matches their learning needs. The school employs 85 teachers supported by 1 teaching assistant, serving 1,493 students - a teacher-to-student ratio of approximately 1:18. The teaching workforce is predominantly drawn from Syria, Jordan, and Egypt, reflecting the school's Arabic-curriculum focus and Arab-majority student body. Staff qualifications data beyond nationality is not published in available source material, though the Irtiqa report confirms that leadership is supported by qualified staff. On pedagogy, the inspection describes lessons where students successfully relate classroom learning to real-world contexts - a recurring strength cited in the school's overall commendations. Technology use is developing, with AI tools becoming more established in Cycle 3 and digital resources in use across subjects, though consistent integration of technology across all cycles remains a target. The school has invested in professional development focused on international assessment awareness and digital resources, but inspectors note that the impact of professional learning on classroom assessment and student outcomes is still developing. Assessment is rated Good across all cycles, with the key recommendation being that teachers embed systematic use of assessment data in planning and review, improve the quality and consistency of feedback, and ensure students understand what to improve and how. Teacher retention and turnover data are not published in available source material. The overall teaching profile suggests a school where the best lessons are genuinely engaging and effective, but where consistency - particularly in differentiation and assessment-driven planning - remains the central improvement challenge.
85
Teaching Staff
Serving 1,493 students across KG-Grade 12
1:18
Approximate Teacher-to-Student Ratio
Based on 85 teachers and 1,493 students
Very Good
Teaching Quality - KG, Cycle 1 & Cycle 3
Irtiqa 2025; Cycle 2 rated Good

Leadership & Management

Al Andalus Private Academy is led by Principal Yahya Nayel Abed Elfattah Dmour, whose tenure and professional background are not detailed in publicly available source material. The ADEK 2025 Irtiqa inspection rates the effectiveness of leadership as Very Good - the highest category awarded in the leadership domain - citing leaders' clear strategic direction, inclusive ethos, strong stakeholder engagement, and well-organized operations. This is a meaningful endorsement: the inspectors observed that school leaders demonstrate a clear understanding of international assessments such as TIMSS, PISA, and PIRLS and promote awareness among all stakeholders, ensuring these benchmarks are recognized in school priorities. Parents and the community partnership is also rated Very Good, reflecting active engagement through the Parent Council, regular communication channels, and community-facing initiatives such as the UAE Red Crescent partnership and university competition programs. The school's homepage highlights graduation ceremonies, sports championships, and student recognition events, indicating a visible and celebratory school culture that keeps families engaged. However, two leadership-related areas are rated Good rather than Very Good: school self-evaluation and improvement planning, and governance. Inspectors note that strategic planning and performance monitoring are not yet sufficiently data-driven, and that systems for tracking progress toward specific targets and evaluating the impact of improvement actions remain inconsistent. For governance, the report acknowledges progress - the governing body is now more representative through increased staff, student, and parent involvement - but a formal, measurable performance-management process for the Principal and senior leaders has not yet been implemented. Middle-leadership accountability and the precision of self-evaluation are also flagged as areas requiring strengthening. The ownership structure of the academy is not confirmed in available source data. Communication with parents is supported through the Parent Council and direct teacher communication, with the school's website and contact page providing a basic digital presence, though the website infrastructure itself appears underdeveloped relative to peer schools.

ADEK Inspection Results (Irtiqa - Decoded)

The November 2025 Irtiqa inspection - conducted over four days from 3 to 6 November 2025 - awarded Al Andalus Private Academy an overall rating of Very Good, maintaining the same rating held since at least the February 2022 inspection. This consistency is itself a positive signal: the school has not declined, and in several areas it has improved. The previous inspection in 2022 identified weaknesses in Cycle 2 Islamic Education and KG Arabic that have since been addressed, with both now rated Very Good. The inspection framework assesses six performance standards. The school achieves Very Good in three of the six standards: Students' Achievements (PS1), Protection and Care (PS5), and Leadership and Management (PS6 - specifically effectiveness of leadership, parent partnerships, and management). The remaining three standards - Teaching and Assessment (PS3), Curriculum (PS4), and elements of Leadership including self-evaluation and governance - are rated Good, indicating solid but not exceptional performance. The most significant inspection finding is the gap between internal assessment results (which consistently show above-curriculum-standard attainment) and external benchmark results (ACER-IBT showing Weak attainment in Cycles 1 and 2; PISA scores below international averages). Inspectors interpret this as evidence that internal assessments may not be sufficiently calibrated against external standards, and that the school's students - while performing well within the MoE framework - are not yet fully prepared for internationally benchmarked analytical tasks. This is a structural challenge for any MoE-curriculum school and is not unique to Al Andalus, but it requires honest acknowledgment. The ADEK 2026 improvement priorities are clearly defined: raise achievement consistency across all cycles and subjects, improve teaching differentiation and feedback quality, strengthen data-driven leadership and governance accountability, and improve performance in international assessments through curriculum alignment and targeted professional development. These are ambitious but achievable targets for a school with strong foundations in pastoral care, Islamic education, and Arabic literacy.
Outstanding Islamic Education at Grade 12
Grade 12 MoE external exam results for AY2024/25 confirm Outstanding attainment in Islamic Education, with internal data showing consistently Outstanding trends over three years across all cycles. This is the school's academic crown jewel.
Very Good Safeguarding and Personal Development
Health, safety, and child protection are rated Very Good across all cycles, and personal development - including student behavior, self-discipline, and responsibility - is also Very Good throughout the school. Inspectors explicitly cite a positive safeguarding culture.
Strong Leadership and Community Engagement
Leadership effectiveness and parent-community partnerships are both rated Very Good. Leaders demonstrate clear strategic direction, an inclusive ethos, and strong stakeholder engagement, with the school actively involved in local community initiatives.
External Benchmark Performance Gap

ACER-IBT results show Weak attainment in Arabic, mathematics, and science for Cycles 1 and 2, and PISA 2022 scores fall below international averages in all three domains. The gap between strong internal results and weaker external benchmarks requires systematic curriculum alignment and more rigorous assessment calibration.

Teaching Differentiation and Assessment Precision

Curriculum design, curriculum adaptation, and assessment are all rated Good rather than Very Good. Inspectors recommend strengthening differentiation so all student groups receive appropriate challenge, embedding systematic use of assessment data in planning, and improving the quality and consistency of written and verbal feedback to students.

Rating History

2025
Very Good
2022
Very Good

Fees & Value for Money

Al Andalus Private Academy's fee schedule, approved by ADEK for the 2025-2026 academic year, positions it firmly at the value end of Al Ain's private school market. Tuition begins at AED 5,890 for KG1 and scales progressively to AED 14,470 for Grades 11 and 12 - a range that makes it one of the most affordable MoE-curriculum private schools in the Al Ain region. For a family with children in Grade 6 and Grade 10, the combined annual tuition would be approximately AED 23,760, before additional costs. Additional costs are clearly structured and modest. The school bus service is priced at AED 2,925 per year across all grade levels - a flat rate that simplifies family budgeting. Books range from AED 210 (KG1) to AED 810 (Grade 4), with no book fees listed for Grades 9 through 12. Uniform costs are a flat AED 260 per year across all grades. These are among the lowest additional cost structures in Abu Dhabi's private school sector. For context, peer MoE-curriculum schools in Al Ain typically charge between AED 8,000 and AED 20,000 for secondary grades, making Al Andalus competitive even at the upper end of its fee range. The school does not publish information on scholarships, bursaries, or sibling discounts on its website, and the Irtiqa report does not reference such programs. Parents should contact the admissions office directly to confirm whether any fee reduction schemes are available. Payment terms and accepted methods are not published in available source material - again, direct enquiry is recommended. The value-for-money verdict is straightforward: for a ADEK-rated Very Good school with Outstanding Grade 12 results in core subjects, TIMSS scores above international averages, and a strong pastoral record, the fee level is genuinely exceptional. Families who prioritize Arabic-medium MoE education, Islamic values formation, and accessible fees in the Al Falaj Hazzaa area will find this school difficult to beat on a cost-per-quality basis. The caveat is that external benchmark performance in the lower cycles needs improvement - parents should factor this into their assessment.
AED 5,890
Lowest Annual Tuition (KG1)
AED 14,470
Highest Annual Tuition (Grades 11-12)
PhaseYear GroupsAnnual Fee
KGKG15,890
KGKG26,620
Primary (Cycle 1)Grade 17,340
Primary (Cycle 1)Grade 27,960
Primary (Cycle 1)Grade 38,770
Primary (Cycle 1)Grade 49,390
Primary (Cycle 1)Grade 510,010
Middle (Cycle 2)Grade 610,630
Middle (Cycle 2)Grade 711,350
Middle (Cycle 2)Grade 811,970
Secondary (Cycle 3)Grade 912,590
Secondary (Cycle 3)Grade 1013,130
Secondary (Cycle 3)Grade 1114,470
Secondary (Cycle 3)Grade 1214,470

Additional Costs

School Bus Transport2,925(annual)
Books - KG1210(annual)
Books - KG2230(annual)
Books - Grade 1710(annual)
Books - Grade 2750(annual)
Books - Grade 3750(annual)
Books - Grade 4810(annual)
Books - Grade 5800(annual)
Books - Grade 6800(annual)
Books - Grade 7800(annual)
Books - Grade 8800(annual)
Books - Grades 9-120(annual)
Uniform260(annual)
Scholarships & Bursaries
No scholarship or bursary programs are confirmed in publicly available source data. Parents seeking financial assistance should contact the school admissions office directly at +97148856600.

The Final Verdict: Who Is This School For?

Al Andalus Private Academy is a school with a clear and honest identity: an affordable, values-driven, Arabic-medium MoE institution that delivers Very Good outcomes by ADEK standards and Outstanding results at the Grade 12 national examination level in its core subjects. It is not trying to compete with high-fee international schools, and it should not be judged against that benchmark. Judged against what it actually is - a community-rooted private school serving Arab-background families in Al Falaj Hazzaa - it performs creditably and, in several respects, impressively. The school's strengths are real and evidence-based: Outstanding Grade 12 results in Islamic Education and Arabic, TIMSS scores above international averages in Grade 4 and Grade 8 mathematics and science, Very Good safeguarding and personal development, strong leadership, and fees that represent exceptional value. The weaknesses are also real: ACER-IBT results in Cycles 1 and 2 are Weak, PISA scores are below international averages, assessment quality needs improvement, and technology integration is still developing. These are not trivial concerns for families whose children will sit in Cycles 1 and 2 for multiple years. The honest bottom line: if your child will be educated primarily in Arabic, within an Islamic values framework, and you are seeking strong national curriculum outcomes at an accessible price point, Al Andalus Private Academy is a sound choice. If you are seeking a school where your child will develop strong English-medium analytical skills, perform well on international benchmarks from an early age, or access a rich extracurricular portfolio with performing arts and international programs, you should look at higher-fee alternatives in Al Ain.

THE “RIGHT FIT”

Arab-background families seeking an affordable, Arabic-medium MoE education with strong Islamic values formation, solid Grade 12 outcomes, and a safe, community-oriented school environment in Al Falaj Hazzaa, Al Ain.

THE “WRONG FIT”

Families prioritizing English-medium instruction, strong international benchmark performance from primary years, a rich performing arts and extracurricular program, or advanced technology integration throughout all school cycles.

For our family, this school is exactly what we needed - strong Arabic, excellent Islamic education, and fees we can actually afford. The Grade 12 results speak for themselves.

Grade 10 Parent

Pros

  • Outstanding Grade 12 MoE exam results in Islamic Education and Arabic
  • ADEK Very Good rating maintained consistently since at least 2022
  • TIMSS 2023 Grade 4 maths score of 551 - above international average of 503
  • Among the most affordable private school fees in Al Ain (from AED 5,890)
  • Very Good safeguarding and child protection across all cycles
  • Very Good personal development and student behavior school-wide
  • Strong leadership effectiveness and parent-community engagement rated Very Good
  • Active community partnerships including UAE Red Crescent and university programs

Cons

  • ACER-IBT external benchmark results are Weak in Cycles 1 and 2 for Arabic, maths, and science
  • PISA 2022 scores below international averages in reading, maths, and science literacy
  • Assessment quality rated only Good - feedback consistency needs improvement across all cycles
  • English reading resources in libraries are limited; library access lacks structured timetabling
  • Technology integration is still developing and inconsistent across cycles