United Private School - Yahar logo

United Private School - Yahar

Curriculum
American
ADEK Rating
Good
Location
Al Ain, Al Yahar
Annual Fees
AED 16K - 31K

United Private School - Yahar

The Executive Summary

United Private School - Yahar occupies a clear and honest niche in the Al Yahar schools landscape: it is an American curriculum Al Ain school built primarily to serve the Arabic-speaking Emirati and Arab expatriate communities of this outlying district, approximately 25 kilometres from central Al Ain towards Abu Dhabi. Holding an ADEK rating Good following the October 2025 Irtiqa inspection, and with school fees Al Ain parents will find genuinely accessible - ranging from AED 15,740 to AED 30,830 annually - UPS Yahar positions itself as a culturally grounded, community-focused school rather than a prestige international institution. For families who want a structured American standards-based education delivered within an authentically Emirati cultural environment, and who do not require the full co-curricular breadth of a flagship US-model campus, this school represents credible value. The student body of 798 is overwhelmingly Emirati (approximately 87%), with Arabic the dominant home language, and the school's identity is shaped accordingly.
ADEK Good 2025American CurriculumFees from AED 15,740Emirati Community FocusKG to Grade 12

The school genuinely understands our children - the values, the language, the culture. My son feels at home here, and the teachers know him by name. That matters more to me than a glossy campus.

Grade 5 Parent, Al Yahar(representative)

Academic Framework & Learning Style

UPS Yahar follows the California State Standards as its primary academic framework, underpinned by the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) for English and Mathematics and the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) for Science. For Arabic, Islamic Studies, and UAE Social Studies, the school implements the UAE Ministry of Education (MoE) curriculum, a dual-framework approach that is well suited to its predominantly Emirati student population. The curriculum is described by the school as skills-based and content-rich, with cross-curricular planning required of all teachers - every educator must prepare at least one integrated lesson linking two or more subject areas per cycle. In terms of teaching methodology, UPS Yahar employs a range of student-centred strategies including Flipped Learning, WebQuest and ICT-based tasks, Kagan cooperative structures, and the 5Es inquiry model. Fun-based learning is embedded in KG, while older students engage in project-based approaches in Mathematics and Science. The school's assessment framework includes formative and summative assessments across three terms, with summative assessments at the end of Terms 1 and 3. Students in Grades 3-9 participate in the NWEA MAP assessments in English Reading, Language Use, Mathematics, and Science, providing an international benchmark. The ADEK 2025 Irtiqa inspection provides the most candid picture of academic performance. In Arabic-medium subjects, attainment is broadly Good across most phases, with Islamic Education and Arabic as a First Language performing at or above MoE standards for the majority of students. However, English-medium subjects - English, Mathematics, and Science - are rated Acceptable across Cycles 2, 3, and 4, with only KG/Cycle 1 achieving Good. MAP spring 2025 results reveal that attainment in English reading and language use was Weak across phases 2, 3, and 4, as was Mathematics attainment across all phases. Science attainment was Very Good in Phases 2 and 4 but Weak in Phase 3. The silver lining is progress: MAP progress ratings were Outstanding in multiple phases for English, Mathematics, and Science, indicating that students are growing rapidly from their starting points even if absolute attainment remains below international norms. For Grade 12, students sit EmSAT for UAE university admission and are prepared for SAT and IELTS for international pathways, enabling access to the American High School Diploma. PISA 2022 results showed scores of 396 in Reading, 432 in Mathematics, and 421 in Science - all below international averages - while TIMSS 2023 Grade 4 Mathematics scored 422 against an international average of 503. These results are a candid reflection of the gap between internal attainment data and international benchmarks, and the school has developed a structured improvement plan in response. SEN provision covers 28 identified students of determination; however, ADEK inspectors noted that support for gifted and talented students and English language learners requires strengthening. There is no published university destinations data.
Good
Arabic-Medium Subjects Overall Attainment
ADEK Irtiqa 2025 - majority above MoE curriculum standards
Outstanding
MAP Progress - English & Maths (Phases 2 & 4)
Spring 2025 NWEA MAP - students growing rapidly from starting points
396
PISA 2022 Reading Score
Below international average of 476; school target was 422
422
TIMSS 2023 Grade 4 Mathematics Score
Below international average of 503; improvement plan in place

Extracurricular Activities (ECAs)

UPS Yahar's extracurricular offering is modest in breadth compared to larger flagship schools in Abu Dhabi, but it is purposefully aligned with the school's community identity and student interests. The school's curriculum page outlines a programme that includes art, drama, and music; sports such as football and chess; science, environment, and reading clubs; educational visits, science fairs, and scientific trips; and debates and public speaking integrated with English, Islamic Studies, and Social Studies lessons. The school's event calendar - visible on its homepage - demonstrates an active co-curricular culture: recent activities include a UAE Math Carnival, a Seniors Art Workshop, a UPS Musical Day, a Programming Debating Court, and celebrations of UAE cultural events including UAE Flag Day, National Day, and Qurqiean. The school also runs Quran recitation competitions and Islamic-themed events that reflect the values of its predominantly Emirati student body. A robotics programme is referenced in historical inspection data as particularly popular among gifted and talented students. In performing arts, the school has a dedicated music room equipped with pianos, drums, guitars, and other instruments, and students perform individually and in groups. Drama activities are referenced in the curriculum and facilities documentation. Sports provision is supported by four playground areas with artificial grass surfaces and shaded zones, a swimming pool for lessons and competitions, and gymnasium facilities available separately for boys and girls sections. The school does not publish a full ECA schedule with counts, so a precise number of clubs cannot be confirmed from available sources. What is clear is that the programme prioritises cultural identity, STEM enrichment, and Islamic values alongside sport - a profile that suits its community well.
4
Playground Areas
Including dedicated KG area with artificial grass and sun shading
UAE Math CarnivalRobotics ProgrammeUPS Musical DayQuran Recitation CompetitionsScience Fairs & Trips

Pastoral Care & Well-being

Pastoral care and student well-being are among the most consistently praised aspects of UPS Yahar's provision. The ADEK 2025 Irtiqa report awarded Very Good to Health and Safety, including child protection and safeguarding arrangements, across all four phases - the highest rating the school received in any category. This is a genuine strength and reflects embedded, reliable systems rather than a superficial compliance exercise. Student personal and social development was rated Good across all phases, with inspectors noting that students demonstrate positive, respectful, and responsible attitudes, a clear understanding of Islamic values, pride in their UAE national identity, and active participation in community and volunteer activities. Relationships between students and staff are described as positive and supportive, creating a productive learning environment. The school's principal, Raed Youssef, articulates a vision centred on nurturing social, emotional, and physical wellbeing alongside academic growth, and this ethos appears to be genuinely embedded in school culture. The school runs anti-bullying awareness events - evidenced by a dedicated Anti-Bullying Awareness event on the school's event calendar - and promotes community responsibility through sustainability projects and national celebrations. Care and support was rated Good in Cycles 1, 2, and 3, though it declined to Acceptable in Cycle 4 (High School), where ADEK inspectors identified insufficient personalised academic and career guidance for older students, particularly regarding subject choices, credit requirements, and pathways to the American High School Diploma. This is a meaningful gap for families with children approaching graduation. The school does not publicly detail a formal counselling or mental health service, which is a transparency limitation.

The teachers genuinely care about the children as individuals. When my daughter was struggling, her teacher reached out to us immediately and worked with us on a plan. That kind of relationship is hard to find.

Grade 8 Parent, Al Yahar(representative)

Campus & Facilities

UPS Yahar occupies a purpose-built campus in Al Aamerah, Al Ain, located behind an ADNOC petrol station on Al Mirsat Street - a practical landmark for families navigating the Al Yahar area. The campus is structured as a two-storey main building housing Grades 1-12, with a separate KG section for the youngest learners. Boys and girls sections are co-educational from KG1 through Grade 4, then separated into distinct sections for Grades 5-12, each with their own dedicated facilities. The school's facilities list is notably comprehensive for its fee band. Smart Classrooms are available throughout the campus, equipped with high-end digital technology to support interactive teaching. The Computer Lab supports coding, programming, graphic design, and digital skills development. An Innovation Lab - described as a vibrant maker space - enables students to work with 3D printing, robotics, and electronics, providing genuine STEM enrichment. Two Science Labs serve the school, each with a preparation room, modern equipment including microscopes and digital sensors, and full safety provisions. There is a dedicated Art Room, a Music Room stocked with pianos, drums, guitars, and other instruments, and a Seminar Room for presentations and collaborative sessions. The library provision consists of two small libraries - one per section - containing approximately 1,300 English and 700 Arabic books, plus 280 culturally relevant magazines, and digital workstations. ADEK inspectors noted that while the libraries are well organised and support focused reading, there are no dedicated areas for independent pleasure reading and genre diversification would benefit student engagement. A Swimming Pool is available for regular lessons, after-school activities, and competitions, shared between sections at separate times. Four playground areas, including a dedicated KG zone with climbing structures, slides, swings, and artificial grass surfaces with shade, complete the outdoor provision. Two cafeterias - one per section - promote healthy eating and socialisation. A Prayer Room provides a quiet space for religious practice. The ADEK inspection confirmed that premises and resources are of good quality and fully support curriculum delivery.
2
Science Labs
Each with preparation room, microscopes, digital sensors, and safety equipment
2,000+
Library Books (English & Arabic)
Approx. 1,300 English and 700 Arabic titles across two libraries
Innovation Lab & 3D PrintingSmart ClassroomsSwimming PoolDual Science LabsSeparate Boys & Girls SectionsDedicated KG Campus

Teaching & Learning Quality

Teaching quality at UPS Yahar is a mixed picture that the ADEK 2025 Irtiqa report captures with unusual candour. Teaching for Effective Learning was rated Good in KG and Cycle 4 (High School), but Acceptable in Cycles 2 and 3 - the middle school years - having declined from Good to Acceptable in Cycle 3 since the previous inspection. This decline is directly linked to recent staff changes and turnover, which has introduced inconsistency in pedagogical delivery across phases. The school employs 50 teachers and 6 teaching assistants for 798 students, giving a teacher-to-student ratio of approximately 1:16. Staff nationalities are primarily Egyptian, Jordanian, and Syrian, with subject knowledge described by inspectors as generally secure. However, not all teachers demonstrate a secure understanding of how students learn best, and differentiation - providing appropriately challenging tasks for both struggling and gifted learners - remains inconsistent. Teachers in Cycles 1 and 4 are more successful in meeting the needs of most students. Assessment practices were rated Acceptable across all phases in 2025, having declined from Good - a significant regression. While the school has begun implementing more rigorous assessment procedures, their impact on improving the reliability, accuracy, and analysis of assessment data is not yet evident. The school uses MAP assessments, baseline assessments at the start of the year, and formative strategies including self- and peer-assessment, though embedding of the latter is inconsistent. Professional development is structured around international assessment frameworks, Depth of Knowledge levels, and higher-order questioning techniques, with both internal and external training provided. The school's use of digital platforms - including Alef, IXL, McGraw-Hill, Qubit, and Abjadiyat - indicates a meaningful investment in technology-enhanced learning, though the ADEK report recommends maximising instructional technology use more effectively to deepen engagement.
1:16
Teacher-to-Student Ratio
50 teachers, 6 teaching assistants for 798 students (2025 inspection data)
Acceptable
Assessment Rating - All Phases
ADEK Irtiqa 2025 - declined from Good; improvement plan in place
Good
Teaching Quality - KG & Cycle 4
ADEK Irtiqa 2025 - strongest phases for teaching effectiveness

Leadership & Management

The current principal is Raed Abdelmoneim Ahmed Youssef, who took up the role ahead of the 2025/26 academic year. His message on the school website articulates a clear and human-centred vision: to provide engaging learning experiences that spark intellectual growth and creativity, while nurturing cultural and moral values to develop responsible, compassionate, and forward-thinking citizens. He emphasises the school's commitment to preparing learners with the skills, mindset, and resilience to contribute meaningfully both locally and globally - language that signals an awareness of the gap between the school's community-focused identity and international academic benchmarks. The ADEK 2025 Irtiqa inspection rated the Effectiveness of Leadership and School Self-Evaluation and Improvement Planning both as Acceptable - a holding pattern that reflects a school in transition. Inspectors acknowledged that the new principal has strengthened systems, procedures, and provisions since the previous inspection, but noted that these improvements have not yet translated into improved student outcomes. This is a familiar pattern in school leadership transitions and is not necessarily alarming, but it does mean that the 2026/27 inspection cycle will be a critical moment for demonstrating impact. Governance was rated Good, while Partnerships with Parents and the Community and Management, Staffing, Facilities and Resources were both rated Very Good - the highest ratings in the leadership domain. Parent communication is facilitated through the school's online portal (ETH Digital Campus), SMS notifications, and direct teacher contact. The school actively engages parents in understanding international assessment results through information sessions and data-sharing meetings. The school website provides a school calendar, curriculum overview, and fee structure, though detailed governance documentation and board composition are not publicly disclosed.

ADEK Inspection Results (Irtiqa - Decoded)

The most recent ADEK Irtiqa inspection of UPS Yahar took place from 27 to 30 October 2025, covering the 2024/25 academic year, and confirmed an overall rating of Good - consistent with the previous inspection in November 2024. This is a school that has maintained its Good standing, which is a positive baseline, but the inspection narrative reveals a school managing complexity: a new principal, staff turnover, declining assessment ratings, and a gap between strong internal attainment data and weaker international benchmark performance. The headline finding is that while personal and social development and safeguarding are genuine strengths, academic achievement in English-medium subjects remains predominantly Acceptable across the middle and upper school. Arabic-medium subjects - Islamic Education, Arabic as a First Language, and UAE Social Studies - perform better, with Good ratings across most phases. The inspection found that MAP progress ratings were Outstanding in several phases, meaning students are growing from their starting points at an impressive rate even if absolute attainment lags international norms. This is an important nuance: the school is adding value, even if its intake starts below international benchmarks. Two areas require particular attention. First, assessment practices declined to Acceptable across all phases - a regression from Good - indicating that the school's data systems are not yet robust enough to drive personalised learning at scale. Second, curriculum provision in Cycle 4 (High School) regressed to Acceptable, driven by limited elective choices and insufficient career guidance for students navigating the American High School Diploma requirements. For families with children in Grades 9-12, this is a meaningful concern. The rating history shows a school that has made remarkable progress from Very Weak in 2012-13 to Good, and has held that Good rating through multiple inspection cycles - a track record that speaks to institutional resilience.
Safeguarding & Student Safety
Health and safety, including child protection and safeguarding arrangements, was rated Very Good across all four phases - the school's highest-performing category and a genuine, embedded strength.
Personal & Social Development
Students across all phases demonstrated Good personal development, strong Islamic values, UAE national identity, and active community participation - consistently praised by inspectors.
Parent & Community Partnerships
Partnerships with parents and the community were rated Very Good, with strong parent engagement, regular data-sharing sessions, and positive relationships between families and staff.
Assessment Reliability & Data Use

Assessment practices declined to Acceptable across all phases. The school must strengthen the accuracy and reliability of assessment data and embed self- and peer-assessment to give students ownership of their progress.

High School Curriculum & Career Guidance

Curriculum provision in Cycle 4 regressed to Acceptable due to limited elective choices and insufficient personalised career and academic guidance for students working towards the American High School Diploma.

Rating History

2012-13
Very Weak
2018-19
Good
2024
Good
2025
Good

Fees & Value for Money

UPS Yahar's fee structure, approved by ADEK for the 2025-26 academic year, places it firmly in the value segment of Al Ain's private school market. School fees Al Ain at this school start at AED 15,740 for KG1 and KG2, rising incrementally through primary and middle school, and peaking at AED 30,830 for Grade 11. Grade 12 fees are slightly lower at AED 29,840 - reflecting the shorter academic year for graduating students. This incremental structure is standard for American curriculum schools in the UAE and is transparent and ADEK-approved. In addition to tuition, families should budget for bus transport at AED 3,510 per year, books at AED 1,000 for KG and AED 2,000 from Grade 1 onwards, and a uniform cost of AED 500 per set. The school accepts VISA and MasterCard for online payments in AED only. Refund policy for tuition fees is handled through the accounts and registrations department on a case-by-case basis. Compared to other American curriculum schools in Abu Dhabi and Al Ain, UPS Yahar sits at the accessible end of the fee spectrum. Schools offering a comparable American curriculum in more central Abu Dhabi locations typically charge two to three times these fees. For an Al Yahar family seeking an ADEK-rated Good school with American standards, a strong pastoral culture, and fees that do not require a six-figure household income, this school represents genuine value. The caveat is that the fee level reflects the resource base: the school does not offer the breadth of electives, sports academies, or international enrichment programmes that higher-fee competitors provide. Families should calibrate expectations accordingly. No scholarships or sibling discount information is published on the school's website, and payment terms follow standard UAE practice of termly installments.
AED 15,740
Lowest Annual Fee (KG1/KG2)
AED 30,830
Highest Annual Fee (Grade 11)
PhaseYear GroupsAnnual Fee
KindergartenKG 115,740
KindergartenKG 215,740
PrimaryGrade 119,110
PrimaryGrade 220,200
PrimaryGrade 321,370
PrimaryGrade 422,460
PrimaryGrade 523,650
Middle SchoolGrade 624,730
Middle SchoolGrade 725,810
Middle SchoolGrade 827,010
Middle SchoolGrade 928,100
High SchoolGrade 1028,020
High SchoolGrade 1130,830
High SchoolGrade 1229,840

Additional Costs

School Bus Transport3,510(annual)
Books - KG1,000(annual)
Books - Grade 1 onwards2,000(annual)
Uniform500(annual)
Scholarships & Bursaries
No scholarships or bursary programmes are published on the school's official website. Families requiring financial assistance should contact the school's admissions office directly.

The Final Verdict: Who Is This School For?

UPS Yahar is a school that knows its community and serves it with genuine commitment. An ADEK Good-rated institution with fees that are among the most accessible for an American curriculum school in Al Ain, it offers a culturally grounded education rooted in Emirati identity, Islamic values, and the California State Standards framework. Its pastoral care is a standout strength - safeguarding is Very Good, student relationships are warm, and the school community is cohesive. For families in the Al Yahar and Al Aamerah area who want their children educated within a familiar cultural and linguistic environment, without the financial burden of premium-tier schools, this is a credible and honest choice. The school's limitations are equally clear. English-medium academic attainment is Acceptable across most of the school, international benchmark scores in PISA and TIMSS fall below international averages, and assessment practices need strengthening. The high school curriculum lacks the elective breadth and career guidance depth that older students deserve. Teacher turnover has introduced inconsistency in the middle school years. Families who prioritise elite university placement, a rich co-curricular programme modelled on the full American school experience, or strong English-language academic outcomes should look elsewhere. This is not a criticism - it is an honest fit assessment. UPS Yahar delivers what it promises for its target community, and that community appears to value it.

THE “RIGHT FIT”

Families in the Al Yahar and Al Aamerah area seeking an ADEK Good-rated, American curriculum education within an authentically Emirati cultural environment, at accessible fee levels between AED 15,740 and AED 30,830.

THE “WRONG FIT”

Families prioritising strong English-medium academic results, international university placement, a broad elective programme, or the full co-curricular experience of a flagship American curriculum school.

For our family, this school is exactly right. The fees are manageable, the values align with ours, and our children are happy and progressing. We are not looking for a fancy international school - we are looking for a good school that cares. This is it.

Grade 10 Parent, Al Aamerah

Pros

  • Safeguarding and child protection rated Very Good by ADEK across all phases
  • Accessible fees from AED 15,740 - among the lowest for American curriculum in Al Ain
  • Strong personal and social development; Good across all phases
  • Outstanding MAP progress ratings in English and Maths in multiple phases
  • Culturally grounded environment aligned with Emirati values and identity
  • Good facilities including Innovation Lab, swimming pool, and dual science labs
  • Parent and community partnerships rated Very Good by ADEK inspectors
  • Full KG to Grade 12 pathway with EmSAT and SAT preparation for graduates

Cons

  • English-medium attainment Acceptable across most phases; PISA and TIMSS scores below international averages
  • Assessment practices declined to Acceptable across all phases in 2025 inspection
  • High school curriculum lacks elective breadth; career guidance for Grades 9-12 insufficient
  • Staff turnover has created teaching inconsistency, particularly in Cycle 3 (middle school)
  • No published university destinations data or scholarship programmes

Campus

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