The American International School in Abu Dhabi is led by Dr. Andrew Torris, School Director, whose appointment has been central to restoring institutional stability following a turbulent period. The school is operated by Esol Education (Educational Services Overseas Limited), a Cairo-based family-run group that manages one of ten schools in the Middle East. AISA has operated continuously in Abu Dhabi since its founding in 1995, giving it nearly three decades of presence in the city — a record few American curriculum schools in Abu Dhabi can match.
The leadership structure beneath Dr. Torris is well-staffed and clearly defined. Kevin Fosburgh serves as Elementary Principal and Brian Kelley as Secondary Principal, supported by three assistant principals: Alia Nejdawi (Elementary), and Cristina Martin and Savvas Largatzis (Secondary). Additional coordinators cover curriculum, IB, inclusion, and athletics, forming a broad senior team. The 2024–2025 ADEK inspection rated leadership effectiveness as Good — a regression from the Very Good judgment of the previous cycle, and one that inspectors directly attributed to governance instability rather than leadership incompetence. Encouragingly, the inspection noted that stability has now returned and that the school is well-positioned to progress.
The central challenge of recent years has been stark: governance uncertainty triggered a 47% staff turnover rate over a short period, a figure that severely disrupted continuity across all phases. Arabic-medium subjects and Phase 3 English-medium teaching were most acutely affected, with teaching in Phase 3 dropping to Acceptable. The inspection was candid that the school lacked the capacity to absorb such rapid staff change, and middle leader development has been identified as a priority area going forward. Parents considering AISA should weigh this context carefully — the decline was structural and circumstantial, not a reflection of the school's long-term educational philosophy.
With 131 teachers serving 1,277 students, AISA operates at a student-to-teacher ratio of 1:10 — significantly more favourable than the Abu Dhabi city average of 1:13.6 across all private schools, and well below the school's own stated maximum class size of 22 students. Faculty originate from more than 25 countries, with the largest national groups drawn from the United States, South Africa, and Canada — broadly appropriate for an American curriculum school. [MISSING: percentage of staff holding postgraduate qualifications]
Parent engagement is a genuine strength. ADEK rated partnership with parents as Very Good in the 2024–2025 inspection — the only leadership and management sub-category to hold that rating. The AISA Parents' Group actively supports new families, coordinates cultural and academic events, and serves as a formal communication channel between the community and administration. The inspection described these partnerships as highly effective, and they represent a meaningful counterweight to the governance difficulties of recent years. The school's vision — centred on intercultural learning, IB inquiry, and student-centred education — remains coherent and consistently communicated by Dr. Torris, whose public messaging emphasises innovation, risk-taking, and community belonging.