The National - News

Enrolment rate grows at public schools

Pupil registrati­on grows in areas of Abu Dhabi emirate where private schools are not present or do not meet local needs

- Roberta Pennington

ABU DHABI // The annual growth rate of enrolment at public schools in the emirate is nearly double that of private schools, according to Abu Dhabi Education Council.

“There is an increase from time to time, maybe about 10 per cent every year,” said Humaid Abdulla, Adec’s student services division manager.

“A lot of families come to Abu Dhabi, a few are migrating from private to public schools and there is a lot of growth happening with the national communitie­s outside the island, so there is growth.”

The increasing enrolment is most evident in the emirate’s newer communitie­s on the outskirts of the city, such as Al Shamkha, Al Bahia, Al Shahama and Al Falah, where few private schools operate and where many Emirati families have moved into new housing.

“There are a lot of residentia­l areas outside the island where there are no private schools or not enough private schools,” Mr Abdulla said. “So this is considered a migration from private to government.” Mr Abdulla said some Emirati pupils enrolled in private schools have had to transfer to public schools to continue their education beyond a certain grade, often because families have moved to a new area where the new private schools do not yet offer all grade levels. “Sometimes they are in a school where it is only up to Grade 5 or 6 and they have to move to another school, and it is very difficult to stay in the same system,” Mr Abdulla said. There are about 135,000 children at Adec’s 250 public schools, from kindergart­en to Grade 12, Mr Abdulla said.

By comparison, the student population at the emirate’s 186 private schools is about 236,000, according to Adec’s Private Schools and Quality Assurance Sector Annual Report 2015- 2016. That means 64.5 per cent of school-age children in the emirate attend private schools.

The 10 per cent growth in public school enrolment cited by Mr Abdulla exceeds the annual increase of the Emirati student population at private schools by 4 per cent. In private schools, the national pupil population is “growing at a compound annual growth rate of 6 per cent”, according to the private schools report.

Adec yesterday announced a new enrolment system for prospectiv­e public school pupils that will speed up the registrati­on process and eliminate waiting lists by automatica­lly redirectin­g the child to the nearest public school with available places in the same catchment area.

“The system is designed to be more intelligen­t in providing available seats,” Mr Abdulla said. “If the capacity of that school is full, it will automatica­lly divert [the pupil] to the nearest school as per the planning.”

Families have been encouraged to register pupils early, because the vacant places are awarded on a first-come, firstserve basis.

Class sizes are capped at 20 pupils for kindergart­en, 25 pupils for Cycle 1 schools and 30 pupils for Cycle 2 and Cycle 3 schools.

“We have a capacity and we have a policy,” said Mohammed Al Dhaheri, executive director of Adec’s school operations.

“We can’t put 31 students in a Grade 12 classroom when the capacity is 30.”

Registrati­on for Emirati pupils for the 2017-2018 aca- demic year will be online and in schools from this Sunday to Thursday, March 17.

Expatriate pupils wishing to enrol in a government school can do so online only from March 19 to March 23, provided they meet Adec’s enrolment criteria for non-nationals and the school has not reached capacity. The number of expatriate pupils in government schools cannot exceed 20 per cent of the total school population. Registrati­on is free for Emiratis and costs Dh6,000 for expatriate­s.

Children entering kindergart­en 1 must be at least four years old by December 31. Children who are five by December 31 enter kindergart­en 2, while children aged six by December 31 enter Grade 1.

For more informatio­n, visit www.adec.ac.ae or call 02 615 0000.

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