How good is King Abdul Aziz international School
My husband just moved to riyadh and we are going to join him in a couple I months. We have 4 boys ages 11,8, an 3( twins) for whom we need to choose a school which is good curriculum and somewhat Islamic. Now I've searched through many blogs, forums and the international schools websites. Ive already decided alameen british islamic school for the twins. But I need to choose a school for the 6th grader and the 3rd grader. From my research I've realized that British and American schools are not for us. We cant aford to send our kids there. Now we are left with manarat international and Ar rowad international. From my search, I've got a feel that these schools have discipline issues. I have a feeling that even if I put the boys in these schools, I've have to get them out eventually. Now I'm only left with King Abdul Aziz, for whom I don't find any bloggers experience. Can someone share their experience regarding King Abdul Aziz International school? Any other international school that you guys can think of. Plz help here. Once we decide the school, then we will look for a house close to that area.
I hope I will find some helpful feedback
Thanks for going through. My lengthy post and being patient

Regards
NK
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My wife and kids will be in Riyadh soon, and I have short-listed Saud Intl and Abdul Aziz Intl schools based on discussions with friends. I will visit the schools in a few weeks, and maybe your husband needs to do the same.
I did hear some negative reviews about Ar Rowad and Manarat, but it depends on who you talk to, some people might like a school tough discipline.
also when it comes to finding a place to live, Sulaiymania and Olaya are close to the schools I mention and they are both relatively cosmopolitan areas.
Good luck!
Best of luck
My son aged 3.5y and now he is studying in one of Pakistani school but i want to change the school. Please need suggestion about King Abdul Aziz International School.
thanks
King Abdul Aziz International School is generally a bit tough to get into it, they have few available seats that generally get filled up in Feb / Mar timeframe, although i don't know anyone with kids there, but this indicates that school must be good.
However, I wouldn't still want to go without recommendation, considering that King Saud is also considered one of the good ones, however, last year, i pulled my children out from there; to me they overdo the discipline bit (very harsh) and their administration is a bit of a mess. Otherwise, very good curriculum, loved the books they use etc.
Manarat and Rowad are bigger schools, comparatively Rowad is bigger on discipline, but i genuinely feel that Manarat has the best teachers. I like the approachability et al but most of all, for a boy going into grade 6, i would specifically recommend Manarat because to me that is probably the only school comparatively better for higher classes, such as O level etc. and admission to Manarat becomes a bit harder from Grade 7 onwards (due to people wanting to move their kids to Manarat for higher education).
Regards
Khan
If you only have a daughter and not a son, and you don't want to go to British School, the option i'd recommend is Learning Caravan School. Though there isn't much of Islamic curriculum there except for the mandatory requirement. However, having gone through many schools, i've felt this to be a better option among them.
JazakAllah
Let me just share my experience and perspective, others can add / disagree.
For starters, almost all of the international schools don't have Islamic curriculum which is much to right home about. I have Rowad school has more detailed learning but what i've seen till date in most schools is a bit of religion history and a bit of Quran; So don't have too high hopes on that front.
Second important thing to know is the level of curriculum. Most probably, your daughter who'd land in third grade over here would be studying curriculum over here, which maybe comparable to grade 2 or grade 1 in other countries. This is generally across the board, except for british etc. because they adhere to their native country curriculum (mostly).
Arabic is included to fulfill the government requirement here and again not much emphasis is placed on it. No measures are generally taken to bring new students at par with existing students and the only requirement is to memorize a few sheets in the end and just pass over the line.
Manarat has a mix of good / average teachers, many coming from UK (though may originally be Pakistani, Egyptian, Lebanese, Saudi etc etc.) however, despite having some good teachers, the real issue again is curriculum where a grade 5 / 6 student coming from lets say UK / Canada etc. would definitely end up being on top of the class but would not be learning much new for a year or two.
Environment is generally extreme, from way too lenient Manarat to way too strick King Abdul Aziz ... Saud was largely recommended to me but my experience with them was them being way too strict for all the wrong reasons.
The reason i think Learning Caravan is a good school is maybe because its a small school, fewer classes, fewer students, principal i think is British, teachers are a good mix, students are largely expats and children are taken care of well; getting a good moderate environment (not too strict, not too lenient) is detrimental to a new kid coming in and getting settled in a new environment.
Regarding Multinational school (it is also called Australian school), that is similar to British with british being better obviously, fee structure is 'not too different' from british as well. But yes, it is considered a good school and no, not much in terms of Islamic education there.
Admissions though will also depend upon the time of year when you land here.
Hope this helps.
regards,
Affan
affanhaider wrote:Well,
Let me just share my experience and perspective, others can add / disagree.
For starters, almost all of the international schools don't have Islamic curriculum which is much to right home about. I have Rowad school has more detailed learning but what i've seen till date in most schools is a bit of religion history and a bit of Quran; So don't have too high hopes on that front.
Second important thing to know is the level of curriculum. Most probably, your daughter who'd land in third grade over here would be studying curriculum over here, which maybe comparable to grade 2 or grade 1 in other countries. This is generally across the board, except for british etc. because they adhere to their native country curriculum (mostly).
Arabic is included to fulfill the government requirement here and again not much emphasis is placed on it. No measures are generally taken to bring new students at par with existing students and the only requirement is to memorize a few sheets in the end and just pass over the line.
Manarat has a mix of good / average teachers, many coming from UK (though may originally be Pakistani, Egyptian, Lebanese, Saudi etc etc.) however, despite having some good teachers, the real issue again is curriculum where a grade 5 / 6 student coming from lets say UK / Canada etc. would definitely end up being on top of the class but would not be learning much new for a year or two.
Environment is generally extreme, from way too lenient Manarat to way too strick King Abdul Aziz ... Saud was largely recommended to me but my experience with them was them being way too strict for all the wrong reasons.
The reason i think Learning Caravan is a good school is maybe because its a small school, fewer classes, fewer students, principal i think is British, teachers are a good mix, students are largely expats and children are taken care of well; getting a good moderate environment (not too strict, not too lenient) is detrimental to a new kid coming in and getting settled in a new environment.
Regarding Multinational school (it is also called Australian school), that is similar to British with british being better obviously, fee structure is 'not too different' from british as well. But yes, it is considered a good school and no, not much in terms of Islamic education there.
Admissions though will also depend upon the time of year when you land here.
Hope this helps.
regards,
Affan
Wow Affan! Great information with a lot of details!
Your post really helps a lot, I am landing in Riyadh probably in April, And I will need school for my 4.5 years old boy, and later for my 2 years old Daughter.
It seems that Multinational School, Learning Caravan School and Saud will be a choice list for expats who we can't affor British and American School.
Kind Regards,
Yes we went ahead with king abdul Aziz intl... And my kids love it..
I agree with Mr. Affan that coming from a different country, here the curriculum is a bit easy, but for my kids it has helped with transition into this new environment. The school is strict on discipline which is good as less bullying cases as compared to other schools. No stress on religious studies at all. My son is in grade 6 and by grade 7, French is compulsory along side arabic. So studies get tougher.
I love their books and curriculum. They hardly send any homework.
I would recommend it 100% for bigger grades.. But for younger kids, I would go with learning caravan. I visited many schools and this one tops the list..
Best of luck with your move.
Nkkundi wrote:OH so sorry.. I just saw my post after a long time time...
Yes we went ahead with king abdul Aziz intl... And my kids love it..
I agree with Mr. Affan that coming from a different country, here the curriculum is a bit easy, but for my kids it has helped with transition into this new environment. The school is strict on discipline which is good as less bullying cases as compared to other schools. No stress on religious studies at all. My son is in grade 6 and by grade 7, French is compulsory along side arabic. So studies get tougher.
I love their books and curriculum. They hardly send any homework.
I would recommend it 100% for bigger grades.. But for younger kids, I would go with learning caravan. I visited many schools and this one tops the list..
Best of luck with your move.
Thank you very much for your feedback, so it seems Learning Caravan will be a good choice.
Where can I get their fees structure and their curriculum information?
Kind Regards,
affanhaider wrote:One caveat though, Multinational costs about as much as British. Will help if you get in touch with schools in advance.
Affan, what do you think about Al faris school ?
I never got answera to my emails to Saud and Alfaris schools.
Will you recommend me too Learning Caravan School?
Nkkundi wrote:OH so sorry.. I just saw my post after a long time time...
Yes we went ahead with king abdul Aziz intl... And my kids love it..
I agree with Mr. Affan that coming from a different country, here the curriculum is a bit easy, but for my kids it has helped with transition into this new environment. The school is strict on discipline which is good as less bullying cases as compared to other schools. No stress on religious studies at all. My son is in grade 6 and by grade 7, French is compulsory along side arabic. So studies get tougher.
I love their books and curriculum. They hardly send any homework.
I would recommend it 100% for bigger grades.. But for younger kids, I would go with learning caravan. I visited many schools and this one tops the list..
Best of luck with your move.
Hi
Can you advise the timings of AbdulAziz international school? I have heard it's till 4pm in the eve.
Multinational school would be perfect for your daughters since it offers an option of teaching the student English and that would help them learn English and study at the same time
I am moving to Riyadh the next month ,I was advised of king saud , king Abdul Aziz, oasis,al ruwad school ,I have two sons grade 1 and kg1 I didn't see them yet I just want to visit two of the what's your recommentons
School continuously increases fee (For last 2 years 2000 per annum per kid) this year they didnt increase
On top of fee, school takes additional money for Books and uniform which will be between 2000 to 3000 Riyals
Curriculum is by SABIS which is not accepted outside SABIS
Rest it depends on your own standards and thoughts.
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