
Al Mawakeb School Al Barsha has occupied its Al Barsha site since 1998, positioning it directly opposite Al Barsha Pond Park — a pleasant setting that gives the campus a degree of openness uncommon in Dubai's denser school districts. The KHDA inspection describes the buildings as clean and well maintained, although some rooms are not well lit — a minor but notable qualifier that suggests the estate, while functional, carries its age in places. Campus size data is not publicly disclosed, which limits direct comparison, though the WSA review describes it as a sprawling site, consistent with the school's large enrolment of 3,329 students.
Academic facilities include a library, science labs, computer labs, and art workshops — a reasonable core provision for a school of this scale. Technology integration is evident across all phases, with a Notebooks for Books (N4B) programme providing notebook computers for Grade 11 and 12 students, and a laptop bundle available for Grades 9–12 new students. The school also operates a Learn-Online eLearning platform and a school portal for e-services. That said, there is no mention of a dedicated maker space, STEAM lab, or innovation hub in the inspection or school data — a gap worth noting for families prioritising hands-on technology environments.
Sports provision covers basketball, volleyball, track and field, table tennis, and football, with out-of-school-hours training available in each. There is no swimming pool referenced in any available data, and no auditorium or dedicated performance space is listed. Arts facilities are represented by art workshops, though the depth of provision for music, drama, or performing arts is [MISSING: specific performing arts facility data]. Student wellbeing is supported by an on-site school clinic and access to counselling services, which the inspection rated positively — wellbeing overall was rated Good by KHDA in 2023–24.
The KHDA rated management, staffing, facilities and resources as Good in the 2023–24 inspection — a consistent finding that reflects adequacy rather than distinction. At fees ranging from AED 15,726 to AED 25,493, Al Mawakeb Al Barsha sits well below the median fee for American curriculum schools in Dubai, which stands at AED 33,610 at the midpoint. At this fee level, the current facilities provision is broadly appropriate — parents should not expect premium infrastructure, but the school delivers a functional, maintained environment that supports its academic programme. Families considering higher-fee American curriculum alternatives in Dubai would be right to expect meaningfully enhanced facilities — dedicated performance spaces, swimming pools, and innovation labs — at that price point. Here, the value proposition is clear: solid, established infrastructure at an accessible fee.