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Iranian Towheed Girls School

Curriculum
Iranian
KHDA
Acceptable
Location
Dubai, Al Karama
Fees
AED 9K - 15K

Iranian Towheed Girls School

The Executive Summary

Iranian Towheed Girls School Dubai is one of a small group of Iranian-curriculum schools operating in the UAE, located on Khalid Bin Al Waleed Road in Al Karama, Dubai. The Iranian curriculum follows the educational framework set by the Iranian Ministry of Education, emphasising Persian language instruction, Islamic studies, and a structured academic program leading to Iranian board examinations - and this school is one of the most affordable ways to access that curriculum in Dubai, with school fees ranging from AED 8,948 to AED 14,877 per year. The KHDA rating of Acceptable has been consistent since the school's first inspection in 2012, and the 2023-2024 DSIB report confirms this position has not shifted. For Iranian families in Dubai who prioritise Persian-medium instruction, cultural continuity and Islamic values within a close-knit community, this school delivers on its core promise. For families seeking a broader academic offer, stronger inclusion systems, or a path to international university qualifications, it does not.
Iranian Government-operatedPersian-medium instructionKHDA Acceptable ratedAED 8,948 entry feesAl Karama location

The school feels like an extension of home. My daughter is surrounded by peers who share her language, her culture and her values. The teachers genuinely care, and the fees are manageable for our family.

Grade 7 Parent(representative)

Academic Framework & Learning Style

The school follows the Iranian national curriculum, set by the Iranian Ministry of Education, and delivered entirely in Persian. The curriculum is structured across three phases - Primary (Grades 1-6), Middle (Grades 7-9) and High (Grades 10-12) - with national board examinations at the end of Grades 5, 8 and 12. In the High phase, students may specialise in mathematics and physics, experimental sciences, or humanities, providing some degree of academic pathway choice before the final board examination. The curriculum is coherent and sequential, ensuring that progression is at least adequate and that there are no severe learning gaps, according to the DSIB 2023-2024 inspection report. However, cross-curricular links are planned but not consistently visible in classroom practice. In terms of subject-level outcomes, mathematics and science are the strongest academic areas, with attainment and progress rated Good across Primary, Middle and High. In High, the more able students are very well challenged and make rapid progress in subjects including trigonometry and applied science. Science knowledge and inquiry skills develop at a steady pace, with a stronger focus on applied science and technical laboratory work in the High phase. English attainment is Acceptable in Primary and improves to Good in Middle and High, with listening and speaking developing well but creative and extended writing remaining underdeveloped across all phases. Arabic as an additional language is Acceptable in attainment but Good in progress, indicating that students are making meaningful gains even if absolute levels remain modest. The school does not publish Iranian board examination results publicly. Academic support for students of determination - of whom there are 54 across the school, a significant proportion of the 210-strong roll - is rated Acceptable and is acknowledged by DSIB inspectors as a development priority. Identification practices are not always precise, and teachers do not yet receive the specialist training required to consistently adapt lessons for students with additional needs. Support for gifted and talented students is similarly underdeveloped. English-language support classes are provided in the lower phases for new students, but broader curriculum modification is limited. Learning skills are rated Good across Primary, Middle and High, with students collaborating well and increasingly taking responsibility for their own learning, though use of technology and opportunities for innovation remain restricted.
Good
Maths attainment and progress (all phases)
DSIB 2023-2024
Good
Science attainment and progress (all phases)
DSIB 2023-2024
Acceptable
English attainment in Primary
Improves to Good in Middle and High
54
Students of determination enrolled
Out of 210 total students - 26% of roll

Extracurricular Activities (ECAs)

Extracurricular provision at Iranian Towheed Girls School is modest in scope, reflecting the school's small size of 210 students and its primary focus on delivering the Iranian national curriculum. The school website references a Green Club, where students grow fruit and herbs as part of environmental and ecological education. Students also participate in cultural celebrations tied to the Iranian calendar - including Nowruz (Persian New Year) - as well as UAE national events such as National Day and Flag Day. The school has hosted an International Day exhibition, where students explored traditions and customs from different world cultures, and students have attended external exhibitions including GETEX 2024 (a higher education and training exhibition) and WETEX 2024 (focused on energy, water and environment technology), providing exposure to university pathways and sustainability themes. A student council is active and organises fund-raising events, food and clothing donations for those in need, and litter-picking activities at the beach. Students hold classroom monitor roles and student representative positions. A Mathematics Decade initiative (Daheh Riaziyat) is run annually in October, featuring mathematics competitions and challenges to promote engagement with the subject. The school recently reopened its kindergarten section, indicating a commitment to expanding its offer. However, DSIB inspectors note that opportunities for enterprise, innovation and wider community participation remain limited, and the range of structured after-school clubs and competitive sports programmes is not extensively documented. Performing arts, Duke of Edinburgh, Model UN and similar enrichment programmes are not referenced in available school or DSIB sources. For families seeking a wide ECA menu comparable to larger international schools in Dubai, this is a clear limitation to weigh.
Good
Social responsibility and innovation skills (all phases)
DSIB 2023-2024
Green Club gardeningStudent council activeGETEX university visitsInternational Day exhibitionMathematics Decade event

Pastoral Care & Well-being

Pastoral care at Iranian Towheed Girls School is built on a foundation of strong student behaviour and respectful relationships. The DSIB 2023-2024 inspection describes students as consistently exhibiting highly positive and responsible attitudes, with exemplary self-discipline and a willingness to embrace constructive feedback. Incidents of bullying are described as rare, and students demonstrate strong sensitivity to the needs of their peers, welcoming new students warmly. The school implements effective anti-bullying procedures and has taught students how to stay safe online. Students are familiar with who to approach if they have a concern, and they appreciate the guidance and advice given by staff. A school counsellor is in place and provides effective pastoral support for all students. The counsellor's presence is a meaningful resource in a school of this size. Health and safety arrangements, including child protection and safeguarding, are rated Good across all phases. Medical care is strong and the school promotes healthy living. Arrangements for students travelling by school transport are described as secure. Wellbeing provision overall is rated Acceptable by DSIB, with leaders having articulated a vision for wellbeing but implementation described as not yet structured or consistently monitored. Students have limited opportunities to lead wellbeing initiatives or influence wellbeing priorities. Wellbeing data is collected but not analysed deeply or used to shape strategy. Older students show developing awareness of mental health. Staff report feeling supported by school leaders. A parent council is active, and parents contribute ideas to school leaders, reinforcing the school's notable strength in community and parental engagement - rated Very Good by DSIB inspectors.

The school is very safe and the teachers know every student personally. When my daughter had a difficult time settling in, the counsellor reached out to us quickly and helped the whole family.

Grade 4 Parent(representative)

Campus & Facilities

Iranian Towheed Girls School occupies an established urban campus on Khalid Bin Al Waleed Road in Al Karama, opposite the Pakistan Consulate. Al Karama is a densely populated, centrally located district of Dubai, well served by public transport including the Dubai Metro (Al Karama and BurJuman stations are within walking distance). The area is home to a large and established Iranian expatriate community, making the school's location a natural fit for its student population. Buildings and learning environments are described by DSIB inspectors as clean, hygienic and well maintained. Facilities are adequate for the delivery of the Iranian curriculum. Science laboratories support practical work, particularly in the High phase where applied science and technical laboratory sessions are a documented feature of learning. New learning spaces intended to support innovation and enterprise have been introduced, but DSIB inspectors note these are not yet embedded in regular teaching practice. The school's website references a library with reading resources available to students. Technology infrastructure is limited. DSIB inspectors note that the use of digital technology to support scientific learning is underdeveloped, and the use of learning technology across subjects and phases is described as restricted. There is no reference to 1:1 device programmes or dedicated coding laboratories in available sources. The school has an active social media presence on Instagram and communicates with families via its website and Telegram channel. The campus does not appear to include a swimming pool or large sports fields, consistent with its urban footprint. With 210 students across Grades 1 to 12, the campus is not overcrowded, and the favourable student-to-space ratio is a practical advantage of the school's small size.
210
Total students on roll
Grades 1-12, all Iranian nationality
Good
Management, staffing, facilities and resources
DSIB 2023-2024
Al Karama central locationMetro-accessible campusScience labs (High phase)Clean, maintained buildingsInnovation spaces introduced

Teaching & Learning Quality

Teaching across Iranian Towheed Girls School is rated Good in Primary, Middle and High by DSIB inspectors in the 2023-2024 cycle. Teachers' subject knowledge is identified as a specific strength of the school. Most lessons across all phases are described as engaging, and teachers are successful in creating positive classroom climates, particularly in Middle and High. The majority of teachers use good questioning techniques to probe students' thoughts and reflections. In the best lessons, challenge is high and teachers recognise the differing needs of individuals and groups. However, there are consistent limitations. In a minority of lessons - particularly in Primary - questioning focuses on factual recall rather than encouraging independent thinking. Differentiation is inconsistent: teachers do not always adapt their methods or resources to meet the needs of different groups, including students of determination or higher-attaining students. Assessment is rated Acceptable across all phases, a meaningful gap below teaching quality. Assessment data aligns with the curriculum but lacks consistent tracking systems across subjects. Data is analysed, but findings are described as superficial and not well used to inform planning or adapt learning to individual needs. Peer- and self-assessment by students is inconsistent and largely limited to the High phase. The school employs 23 teachers and 1 teaching assistant for 210 students, giving an approximate teacher-to-student ratio of 1:9 - notably favourable by Dubai standards. All teachers are Iranian nationals. The school has invested in continuous professional development, which has been successful in developing critical thinking skills, especially for senior students. However, specialist training for supporting students of determination and for embedding technology in teaching is described as insufficient. Teacher retention data is not published, but the school's small, community-focused nature and government-backed ownership suggest a degree of stability in staffing.
1:9
Teacher-to-student ratio
23 teachers, 210 students
Good
Teaching for effective learning (all phases)
DSIB 2023-2024
Acceptable
Assessment quality (all phases)
DSIB 2023-2024 - a gap below teaching quality

Leadership & Management

The school is led by Principal Nayereh Nezamdoost Faraz, who was appointed on 13 October 2023 - meaning she was relatively newly in post at the time of the most recent DSIB inspection. The school operates under the ownership of the Iranian Government and is part of a directorate managing eight Iranian schools across the UAE, with a combined student population of approximately 6,000. This structure means the school benefits from a degree of institutional backing but also operates within a framework where strategic direction is partly set externally. DSIB inspectors rate the effectiveness of leadership as Acceptable and note that senior leaders are stronger in managing the school operationally than in leading on teaching and learning. Communication among leaders is described as professional, and day-to-day operations are well managed. However, improvement planning lacks rigour, and middle leaders have yet to play a fully effective role in monitoring and raising standards within their departments. Leaders are committed to UAE National Agenda priorities of inclusion and wellbeing, but their implementation of these priorities is not yet consistently embedded. Governance is rated Acceptable, with governors not yet acting as a sufficiently strong critical friend or holding leaders accountable with the precision required. DSIB inspectors recommend that governors empower senior leaders to lead improvement planning in close collaboration with middle leaders, and ensure the school has an accurate, data-informed view of its strengths and development areas. Parents and the community are rated Very Good - a genuine highlight. Parents receive half-termly progress reports and have access to meetings where next steps in learning are discussed. A parent council is active. Communication between the school and families is prompt and effective, and this partnership is one of the school's most consistently praised attributes across multiple inspection cycles.

KHDA Inspection Results (Decoded)

The DSIB 2023-2024 inspection rates Iranian Towheed Girls School as Acceptable overall - a rating it has held without change since its first inspection in 2012. This is a school that has been consistently Acceptable for over a decade, and the 2023-2024 report does not suggest it is on an upward trajectory in the near term. Parents should understand what Acceptable means in the Dubai inspection context: it signals that the school meets minimum regulatory standards but has not demonstrated the consistent quality of provision that earns a Good or higher rating. The school's most significant strength, and the finding that genuinely stands out in the DSIB report, is students' personal development. In Middle and High, personal development is rated Outstanding - the highest possible DSIB rating - and Very Good in Primary. This is not a minor finding. It means students at this school demonstrate exemplary behaviour, deep respect for Islamic values, strong self-discipline and warm, supportive peer relationships. Understanding of Islamic values and awareness of Emirati and world cultures is rated Very Good across all phases. Parental engagement is rated Very Good, reflecting a school community that is genuinely connected and communicative. Academically, mathematics and science are the clear leaders, rated Good in attainment and progress across all phases. English improves significantly as students move through the school, reaching Good in Middle and High. Assessment is the weakest academic provision indicator, rated Acceptable across all phases - inspectors note that data is collected but not used with sufficient depth to drive improvement. Curriculum design and adaptation are Acceptable, with the curriculum described as coherent but not sufficiently modified to meet diverse needs. Wellbeing and inclusion are both rated Acceptable, with structured improvement required in both areas. The Dubai Focus Area ratings from KHDA confirm Acceptable for both Wellbeing and Inclusion.
Outstanding Personal Development (Middle and High)
Students in Middle and High demonstrate exemplary behaviour, self-discipline and responsibility. DSIB rates personal development Outstanding in these phases - the highest possible rating - reflecting a genuinely exceptional school culture.
Very Good Parental Partnerships
Parent and community engagement is rated Very Good, with active parent council involvement, regular half-termly reports and responsive communication between school and families. This is a consistent multi-year strength.
Good Teaching and Strong Subject Knowledge
Teaching for effective learning is rated Good across Primary, Middle and High. Teachers' subject knowledge - particularly in mathematics and science - is identified as a specific school strength, and classroom environments are positive and orderly.
Leadership Impact on Teaching and Learning

Senior leaders manage operations effectively but have limited impact on improving teaching, learning and assessment quality. Middle leaders are not yet empowered to monitor their departments or hold staff accountable for outcomes. DSIB recommends clearer lines of responsibility and more rigorous improvement planning.

Wellbeing Structure and Inclusion Precision

Wellbeing provision is not yet structured or monitored consistently, and students have limited opportunities to lead wellbeing initiatives. Identification and support for students of determination lack precision, and teachers require more specialist training to adapt lessons effectively for diverse learning needs.

Inspection History

2023-2024
Acceptable
2022-2023
Acceptable
2019-2020
Acceptable
2018-2019
Acceptable
2017-2018
Acceptable
2016-2017
Acceptable
2015-2016
Acceptable
2014-2015
Acceptable
2013-2014
Acceptable
2012-2013
Acceptable
2011-2012
Acceptable

Fees & Value for Money

Iranian Towheed Girls School offers a Iranian curriculum from Pre-Primary through Grade 12, located in Al Karama, Dubai. According to the KHDA official fee schedule, annual tuition fees range from AED 8,948 for Grades 1–5 up to AED 14,877 for KG 1 and KG 2, making it one of the more affordable private school options in Dubai. The average fee across all year groups is approximately AED 9,860 per year.

AED 8,948
Annual Fees From
AED 14,877
Annual Fees To
Year / GradeAnnual Fee
KG 1
AED 14,877
KG 2
AED 14,877
Grade 1
AED 8,948
Grade 2
AED 8,948
Grade 3
AED 8,948
Grade 4
AED 8,948
Grade 5
AED 8,948
Grade 6
AED 9,361
Grade 7
AED 9,361
Grade 8
AED 9,361
Grade 9
AED 9,499
Grade 10 (Humanities)
AED 9,499
Grade 10 (Science)
AED 9,499
Grade 10 (Maths)
AED 9,499
Grade 11 (Science)
AED 9,499
Grade 11 (Maths)
AED 9,499
Grade 11 (Humanities)
AED 9,499
Grade 12 (Humanities)
AED 9,499
Grade 12 (Science)
AED 9,499
Grade 12 (Maths)
AED 9,499

The fee structure is tiered across three broad bands: KG levels are priced at AED 14,877, Grades 1–5 at AED 8,948, Grades 6–8 at AED 9,361, and Grades 9–12 (across all streams including Science, Maths, and Humanities) at AED 9,499. This pricing positions the school as a cost-effective choice for Iranian expatriate families seeking a familiar national curriculum in Dubai.

No additional costs, sibling discounts, payment plan details, or scholarship information are explicitly stated in the available source material. Families are advised to contact the school directly at +971 4 396 1234 or via email at dbrtohidd@yahoo.com for the most up-to-date information on any supplementary fees or financial arrangements.

The Final Verdict: Who Is This School For?

Iranian Towheed Girls School is a school with a clear, unapologetic identity: it exists to serve Iranian families in Dubai who want their daughters educated in Persian, within the Iranian national curriculum framework, in a culturally and religiously aligned environment. On that specific mission, it delivers. The school community is close-knit, behaviour is exemplary, personal development outcomes are genuinely outstanding in the upper phases, and parental engagement is one of the strongest in the Dubai private school sector. Fees are accessible by any measure. For the right family, this is not a compromise - it is the right choice. For families outside this specific profile, the picture is more complicated. The school has held an Acceptable KHDA rating for over a decade without meaningful upward movement. Leadership impact on teaching and learning is limited. Assessment practices are underdeveloped. Inclusion provision requires significant improvement. The ECA offer is narrow. The school website is primarily in Persian, which creates a practical barrier for non-Persian-speaking families researching admissions. University destination data is not published. These are real limitations that parents should weigh honestly before enrolling. The bottom line: if your family is Iranian, you want your daughter educated in Persian, and you value cultural continuity, Islamic values and a safe, orderly school community at genuinely accessible school fees in Dubai, Iranian Towheed Girls School in Al Karama deserves serious consideration. If you are looking for a school with strong academic results, broad extracurricular opportunities, robust inclusion systems or a pathway to international qualifications, look elsewhere.

THE “RIGHT FIT”

Iranian families in Dubai seeking Persian-medium instruction, Iranian board examination preparation, strong Islamic values, and a culturally cohesive, affordable school community for their daughters from Grade 1 through Grade 12.

THE “WRONG FIT”

Families seeking a broad international curriculum, strong ECA provision, robust inclusion support, published academic results or a pathway to internationally recognised qualifications such as the IB Diploma or A-Levels.

For us, it was never a question of finding the most prestigious school. We wanted our daughter to grow up knowing who she is - her language, her culture, her faith. This school gives her that every day.

Grade 11 Parent

Strengths

  • Outstanding personal development in Middle and High phases (DSIB 2023-2024)
  • Among the lowest school fees in Dubai's private sector (from AED 8,948)
  • Very Good parental engagement - active parent council and responsive communication
  • Good mathematics and science outcomes across all phases
  • Highly favourable teacher-to-student ratio of approximately 1:9
  • Safe, orderly campus with strong safeguarding rated Good by DSIB
  • Strong cultural and Islamic values education rated Very Good across all phases
  • Part of an established Iranian Government school network with institutional backing

Areas for Improvement

  • Acceptable KHDA rating held for over a decade with no upward movement
  • Assessment practices rated Acceptable - data not used effectively to drive improvement
  • Inclusion provision for students of determination is inconsistent and underdeveloped
  • Narrow ECA offer with limited enterprise, innovation and competitive sports
  • School website is primarily in Persian, creating a barrier for non-Persian-speaking parents