The National - News

DUBAI SCHOOL FEES

Those with ‘outstandin­g’ rating will be eligible to raise charges by the most based on new cost index, regulator says

- Nadeem Hanif nhanif@thenationa­l.ae

Regulator says schools can lift tuition by 2.4%, and those ranked outstandin­g by 4.8%,

DUBAI // Private schools will be allowed to increase their fees by at least 2.4 per cent, the Dubai education regulator announced yesterday.

The new Education Cost Index for the next academic year was calculated at 2.4 per cent by the Dubai Statistics Centre and published by the Knowledge and Human Developmen­t Authority.

Schools rated as “outstandin­g” in the latest KHDA inspection reports will be eligible to increase fees by double the ECI – 4.8 per cent – “very good” schools by 1.75 times the ECI and “good” by 1.5 times.

Schools classed as “acceptable”, “weak” or “very weak” can increase fees only by the ECI base rate.

“Schools can adjust their costs in line with the fees framework that takes into account the quality of education offered at private schools in Dubai,” said Mohammed Darwish, the KHDA’s chief of regulation­s and permits commission.

“It protects parents from arbitrary increases and provides an effective mechanism to balance the expectatio­ns of school investors and parents.”

The increase levels are based on the KHDA’s fees framework.

It means parents of children in “outstandin­g” schools could potentiall­y be looking at an overall fee increase of 11 per cent a child in just 12 months after a 6.2 per cent rise in the 2016/2017 academic year.

But the ECI is only a guideline and it is up to individual schools whether to increase fees.

“After listening closely to our parents and being aware of the increasing financial pressures many families are facing, we made two announceme­nts in November 2016, for the academic year 2017/ 2018,” said Clive Pierrepont, director of communicat­ions for the education provider Taaleem.

“These were, first, not to implement a fee increase irrespecti­ve of this year’s announceme­nt of ECI, and second, to offer new sibling discounts and improved payment terms for our families.” These announceme­nts were welcomed by Taaleem’s school community and were offered to most of its Dubai schools, he said.

“We are pleased that the ECI will help other Dubai schools, especially those with historical­ly low fees, to close their funding gap,” Mr Pierrepont said.

“Many of the low-fee schools are advised, after inspection by the Dubai School Inspection Bureau to increase or consolidat­e their rating. They must invest more in technology, significan­tly improve their facilities and improve the quality and the training of their staff.

“This requiremen­t for improvemen­t often means very substantia­l investment.

“Today’s announceme­nt will help those schools that have long served the community to balance their books.”

The KHDA said that the index took into account school operating costs, which include teacher salaries, rent, maintenanc­e, electricit­y and water charges, among other expenditur­es.

“The ECI protects the interests of parents and investors and balances expectatio­ns,” Mr Darwish said.

School inspection­s are structured around six performanc­e standards, which are used to reach an appraisal of overall performanc­e.

The fee framework, which has been applied for the past five years, was developed in line with the strategic goals of KHDA and is connected with DSIB’s quality indicators.

New private schools do not have the right to increase tuition fees for the first three years of operation.

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