
Al Basaier Private School - Branch Shargan, Sharjah
Ministry of Education Curriculum, Subjects & Qualifications
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Curriculum & Academics
Al Basaier Private School - Branch Shargan operates under the UAE Ministry of Education (MoE) curriculum, serving 719 students from KG1 through Grade 9 across kindergarten, primary, and intermediate cycles. Instruction is delivered in Arabic, with English taught as a compulsory additional language. The school holds no secondary cycle qualification pathway — students completing Grade 9 must transition elsewhere for Grades 10–12 — which is a structural limitation parents of older children should weigh carefully. No vocational tracks, bilingual programmes, or international examination frameworks such as the IB Diploma or Cambridge qualifications are offered at this stage.
On the inclusion front, Al Basaier has established a meaningful SEN and Inclusion provision, with 25 students with special educational needs formally identified and supported. The 2022–2023 inspection by the Sharjah Private Education Authority specifically cited the school's procedures for identifying and supporting students with special educational needs as a key strength. A Gifted and Talented support programme also exists, though inspectors flagged the quality of provision for high-ability learners as an area requiring significant development — structured enrichment and differentiated challenge for gifted students remain underdeveloped relative to peer schools.
The school's most significant academic story is one of trajectory. Inspectors rated overall school effectiveness as Good in 2022–2023, an improvement from the Acceptable rating recorded in 2018 — a meaningful climb within the Sharjah Private Education Authority's six-point scale. Among the 17 MoE-curriculum schools in Sharjah, only 7 hold a Good rating, with 10 rated Acceptable, placing Al Basaier in the stronger half of its curriculum peer group. Student achievement across all subjects — Islamic Education, Arabic, English, Mathematics, Science, Social Studies, and the Arts — was rated Good at every stage from KG through Grade 9, representing a consistent upward shift from the previous inspection cycle. Student attendance of 96.6% was rated Outstanding by inspectors, reflecting a positive and stable school environment.
In terms of teaching approach, the 2023 inspection found that teachers apply varied instructional strategies consistently, contributing to the improvement in teaching effectiveness to Good. However, inspectors identified classroom technology use as limited, with students able to access technology only for basic home research rather than as an integrated learning tool. This is a notable gap: the inspection explicitly called for increasing technology use in classrooms as a priority improvement area. Critical thinking, problem-solving skills, and cross-curricular connections were also rated as insufficiently developed, with limited classroom opportunities provided for higher-order thinking across all cycles.
Assessment processes were rated Acceptable at the time of the 2023 inspection — the only domain to fall below Good — and inspectors highlighted the need to improve how assessment data is used to influence day-to-day teaching practice. International benchmark data was unavailable: IBT (International Benchmark Test) results had not yet been issued at the time of inspection, meaning no external comparative performance data exists against which to evaluate student outcomes. University destination data is not applicable given the school's Grade 9 ceiling. The school's fee range of AED 7,000–AED 7,500 sits well below the average for MoE-curriculum schools in Sharjah at AED 10,212, positioning Al Basaier as one of the most affordable options within its curriculum type — a meaningful consideration for Arab expatriate families, who form the core of the school's Syrian and Egyptian student community.