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Al Ashraf Primary School is a small independent Islamic primary and nursery in Gloucester, educating children from age 2 to 11, with capacity for 235 pupils. The school sits within a wider trust-run family of schools and describes its purpose as delivering the national curriculum alongside Islamic morals, with a strong emphasis on pupils’ character and wellbeing.
One of the defining features is how explicit the day is. Published timings show English and mathematics taught daily in the morning, with Islamic studies as a core daily lesson, then a broader afternoon curriculum that includes subjects such as history, geography, science, art, design and technology, personal, social, health education, computing and physical education. For families who want a faith-centred environment where routines and expectations are made very clear, that structure is likely to be a major draw.
Ranking data is not available provided for this school. The latest Independent Schools Inspectorate (ISI) inspection (8 to 10 May 2024) reports that the school meets the Standards, including in safeguarding.
This is a school that positions values as daily practice, not background decoration. The website sets out an AKHLAQ framework, appreciation, kindness, honesty, love, ambition and quality, and links this explicitly to pupils’ behaviour and the wider culture the school is trying to build. The prospectus also describes a clearly Islamic rhythm to school life, including daily greetings, regular duas for knowledge, and prayer routines for older pupils at certain times of year.
Community links are a repeated theme in official materials. The ISI report describes strong relationships with families and local organisations, and it also frames the school’s ethos as combining national curriculum expectations with Islamic morals and a focus on wellbeing. That combination typically appeals to families who want a close alignment between home life and school culture, as well as consistency around manners, respect, and conduct.
The school also operates mixed-age classes across four groups (including early years and three mixed key stage groupings), which can shape the feel of the classrooms and how children learn to support each other. Mixed-age models can work particularly well when routines are strong and teaching is carefully sequenced, as pupils revisit concepts with increasing sophistication rather than moving in strict year-by-year silos.
There are no Key Stage 2 performance figures or FindMySchool ranking metrics available for this school, so it is not possible to present verified percentages or scaled scores here without guessing. (For independent primaries, published performance data can also be limited, depending on what the school chooses to report.)
What can be evidenced is the most recent inspection conclusion. The May 2024 ISI inspection reports that pupils typically make good academic progress, with particular strength in numeracy and language, and it also notes high standards of behaviour. Where that becomes useful for parents is as a directional indicator: teaching and assessment systems appear sufficiently secure to meet regulatory expectations, while still leaving clear priorities for improvement.
Academic organisation is one of the school’s clearest “tells”. The published model places English and mathematics at the centre of the morning, with Islamic studies a daily component, then a broader afternoon rotation of foundation subjects. This sort of timetable tends to suit children who benefit from routine and repetition, particularly in core skills such as reading, writing and numeracy, while still giving time each day to wider curriculum breadth.
The ISI report describes teachers having good subject knowledge and using an appropriate range of resources and methods, supported by assessment information that leaders use to check progress and plan next steps. It also references a strengthened approach to writing across subjects since the previous inspection, which usually signals more consistent expectations about spelling, sentence construction, and extended writing in foundation topics.
Early years provision is described as aligned to national requirements, with an emphasis on imaginative play, independent and collaborative activity, and outdoor opportunities. For families comparing settings, the prospectus frames early years as explicitly integrating Islamic tarbiyah alongside the Early Years Foundation Stage areas of learning.
The most practical implication for parents is planning Year 6 early: visiting likely Year 7 options, understanding application routes, and checking how pastoral and academic information is shared at transfer. If your shortlist includes selective routes, it is also sensible to ask directly what support the school provides (for example, familiarisation sessions versus formal preparation), as approaches vary widely and should not be assumed.
Admissions are handled directly by the school rather than through Local Authority coordinated primary admissions. The school’s admissions page directs families to apply using its management information system, and it also states that prospective families can request a tour with the senior leadership team.
The homepage messaging indicates that applications for Reception have, at times, been advertised as limited in spaces, which is a useful signal to enquire early rather than assuming places will be available close to September entry. For in-year entry, the most important questions are usually practical: current class sizes, how the school supports pupils joining mid-topic, and what the settling-in plan looks like, particularly for children entering early years.
Because this is an independent school, distance-based criteria and Local Authority catchment rules are typically less central than they are for state primaries. If location and travel time matter (they usually do), ask about start-of-day routines and any parking expectations, especially at drop-off.
Pastoral intent is written plainly into the school’s public materials, with repeated emphasis on pupils feeling secure and safe, and on character education linked to Islamic manners and ethics.
From an external-evidence standpoint, the May 2024 ISI inspection describes a culture where pupils feel happy and safe, and it also highlights the role of wellbeing in leaders’ decisions and in personal, social and health education. For parents, the key implication is to explore how the school handles the everyday issues that shape children’s experience: friendships, behaviour consistency across classes, and the clarity of safeguarding processes for concerns raised by pupils or families.
The school publishes a weekly clubs schedule with specific named options, which is more helpful than generic claims about enrichment. Current listings include Sports Club (Key Stage 2), Debate Club (Key Stage 2), Acapella Club (whole school), Arts and Crafts Club (Key Stage 1), Mindfulness Club (Key Stage 2), and Lego Club (Reception and Key Stage 1).
The prospectus also references a broader set of enrichment opportunities, including activities such as newspaper club and netball club, and it describes relationships with local organisations and sports clubs, including an affiliation with Gloucester Rugby for coaching during physical education lessons. The best way to interpret this is to ask two follow-up questions: which activities are guaranteed every term versus rotating, and what proportion of pupils typically participate.
The ISI report’s improvement priorities are also relevant here. It notes that extracurricular opportunities were limited at the time of inspection, and it recommends a more coordinated programme to prepare pupils for life beyond school. If your child thrives on clubs, performances, and creative outlets, it is worth probing what has changed since May 2024, and what the current timetable looks like.
For the academic year 2025 to 2026, the admissions policy states fees of £2,450 plus VAT per child. The same policy also sets out sibling discounts, 10% for a second child and 40% for a third sibling.
Nursery and early years funding arrangements can differ substantially between settings, so families considering nursery should confirm the current early years offer and any funding eligibility directly with the school.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per year
Published timings indicate gates open at 8:15am, doors close at 8:30am for registration, and the school day ends at 3:30pm (with a note that Reception has an amended timetable).
Extracurricular breadth. Inspection evidence highlights that extracurricular opportunities were limited at the time of the May 2024 inspection. If clubs are central to your child’s happiness, ask what is now running weekly, and how participation is encouraged.
Creative and aesthetic curriculum balance. The ISI report recommends expanding opportunities for pupils to develop creative and aesthetic skills. Families looking for a particularly arts-heavy primary experience should explore how art, design and performance are timetabled across the year.
Faith-centred culture. The school’s ethos is explicitly Islamic and woven into routines and expectations. This is a strong positive for many families, but those seeking a more secular or multi-faith approach should weigh fit carefully.
Al Ashraf Primary School offers a clearly structured day, a faith-centred moral framework, and a curriculum built around daily core learning alongside Islamic studies. Inspection evidence from May 2024 indicates that the school meets regulatory Standards and that pupils typically make good progress, while also pointing to development priorities around enrichment and creative opportunities.
Who it suits: families seeking an independent Islamic primary and nursery with explicit routines, close home school alignment on values, and a calm, purposeful academic focus. Admission is direct to the school, so the practical challenge is usually availability and timing rather than catchment rules.
The most recent external inspection evidence is the Independent Schools Inspectorate visit in May 2024, which reports that the school meets the required Standards, including in safeguarding. If you are considering a place, it is sensible to ask what has changed since that inspection, particularly around extracurricular breadth and creative curriculum opportunities.
For the academic year 2025 to 2026, the admissions policy states fees of £2,450 plus VAT per child. The same document describes sibling discounts, 10% for a second child and 40% for a third sibling. Families considering nursery should confirm current early years arrangements directly with the school.
Applications are made directly to the school via its online admissions system, and the admissions page indicates that families can request a tour. Because this is an independent school, places are not allocated through the Local Authority’s Reception admissions portal.
Published timings show registration at 8:30am and a 3:30pm finish, with daily English and maths in the morning, Islamic studies as a daily lesson, and a broader afternoon programme including subjects such as history, geography, science, art, computing and physical education.
The school publishes named clubs including Debate Club, Acapella Club, Mindfulness Club and Lego Club, alongside sport and arts and crafts options. Families should ask which clubs run every term and how many places are available, as participation levels and schedules can change.
Get in touch with the school directly
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