Development and Achievement Programs
Students here engage with the year-long STEAM THRIVE Programme, built around hands-on challenges and real competitions. Through field trips and collaborations with industry experts, they develop abilities in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics that extend well beyond classroom boundaries. From Year 10 onwards, participants can pursue the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award—an international self-development framework. As they volunteer, learn new skills, and embark on expeditions, confidence grows alongside teamwork capabilities. Each tier, from bronze through to gold, not only strengthens university applications but shapes character in lasting ways.
Participation in ISP Global Projects
Through International School Partnership programs, students at The English College Dubai connect with peers worldwide. ISP Model United Nations trains them in public speaking and diplomacy as they step into the roles of committee delegates. Creative pathways open through ISP Filmmakers, where participants tackle everything from scriptwriting to editing, and ISP Artists, which invites artistic experimentation culminating in virtual exhibitions. Meanwhile, ISP Changemakers enables socially meaningful projects—students secure grants to implement their ideas and create tangible impact around them.
EC Diploma and Future Skills
The senior years spotlight the EC Diploma, a proprietary program designed specifically for today’s employment landscape. Participants explore 16 core competencies, including critical thinking, cognitive flexibility, leadership, and emotional intelligence. Mandatory for all Sixth Form students, this pathway pushes them beyond academic frameworks. It sharpens foreign language proficiency while developing public speaking abilities and adaptability—qualities that employers and universities genuinely value.
Multicultural Environment at The English College Dubai
Bringing together 87 nationalities and 61 languages, this Dubai institution creates an authentically global community. While English serves as the primary teaching medium, students can pursue GCSE and A Level courses in Arabic, French, and Spanish, broadening their cultural horizons. Progress gets tracked through Flash Academy, which conducts assessments each term. The results speak clearly: in 2024-25, nearly all learners studying English as an additional language advanced by at least one proficiency level, demonstrating how effectively language support operates here.