East Coast English School follows the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) framework, the Indian national curriculum widely recognised across the Gulf for its rigour in mathematics and science. The school has been formally affiliated to CBSE since 2002, giving it over two decades of experience delivering this curriculum to a predominantly Indian and Bangladeshi student population. Classes run from KG1 through to Grade 10, meaning the school does not offer a post-Grade 10 pathway; families with children approaching the senior secondary years will need to plan a transition to another institution for Grades 11 and 12. This is a meaningful limitation for families thinking long-term. The school participates in external benchmarking through CBSE examinations, TIMSS, and ASSET assessments, providing some triangulation of internal performance data against external standards. The headline academic result - a claimed 100% pass rate in Grade 10 CBSE examinations for nine consecutive years - is the school's strongest selling point, though the SPEA inspection noted a disconnect between the school's optimistic internal assessment data and what reviewers actually observed in lessons and in students' work. In English, for example, internal data showed outstanding attainment in KG, yet inspectors found attainment to be weak in that phase. This pattern of inflated internal data versus observed reality recurs across several subjects and is a concern parents should weigh carefully. In practice, SPEA found attainment and progress to be acceptable across Primary, Middle, and High phases in English, mathematics, science, social studies, and Islamic education - meaning students are broadly meeting minimum curriculum standards but are not consistently exceeding them. A notable strength identified by inspectors was students' confidence and fluency in spoken English across phases, and the development of creative writing techniques in higher grades. In mathematics, students in Middle and High demonstrate competence in algebraic problems and factorisation, and science students in Grade 10 achieved acceptable CBSE results with a large majority attaining B1 or above. The school's pedagogical approach is broadly traditional: teacher-led instruction, textbook-based learning, and worksheet-heavy recording. Inspectors observed that in the best lessons - particularly at Grade 9 level - students display higher-order thinking and are given opportunities to research and lead their own learning. However, these moments are not consistent across the school. Problem-solving skills in mathematics are underdeveloped in Primary and Middle, practical laboratory work in science is very restricted across all phases, and students' involvement in debate, role play, and drama in English lessons is limited. The KG phase is the most significant academic concern: English attainment and progress are rated weak, phonics awareness and writing are underdeveloped, and learning skills are rated weak. SPEA explicitly noted that leaders had not responded adequately to the previous review's recommendations for KG. For families enrolling young children, this is a red flag that warrants direct questioning of the school at the admissions stage. Academic support for students with special educational needs (SEN) is now formally in place following the previous inspection, though inspectors noted it needs more time to consolidate. There are no students of determination currently enrolled according to SPEA data. Gifted and talented provision is not formally described, and inspectors noted that higher-attaining students across multiple subjects are not being stretched to make the progress of which they are capable.
100%
Grade 10 CBSE Pass Rate
Claimed for 9 consecutive years
Acceptable
Attainment - Primary, Middle, High
Across English, Maths, Science (SPEA 2024)
Weak
KG English Attainment and Progress
SPEA 2024 - flagged as priority concern
B1+
Grade 10 Science CBSE Results
Large majority of students achieved B1 or above