This is an all-through independent school for ages 3 to 16, with an unusually early start to the day for some students and a clear emphasis on structure and self-discipline. The published timings set the tone: Aalimah and Hifz students begin at 7.25am on most weekdays, while Islamic Studies students begin at 7.55am (and 7.30am on Fridays).
Academic performance at secondary level is a headline strength. Ranked 481st in England and 2nd in Newham for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), the school sits above England average, placing it comfortably within the top 25% of schools in England.
Leadership is clearly signposted on the school’s own materials, which name Rookshana Adam as Executive Headteacher.
Routine and purpose are central to how this school presents itself, and that comes through in the practicalities as much as the ethos. A start time in the 7am hour is not a branding flourish, it is a real commitment families must be ready for, especially for students on the Aalimah and Hifz pathways. The upside is clear: it builds a culture where punctuality is not negotiable, and where schoolday expectations are set early.
The school also communicates a strong sense of pupil responsibility. One example in the most recent inspection is peer-led safeguarding education, where older pupils ran a workshop for younger pupils about the risks of vaping. That kind of student-to-student message is a useful indicator of how leadership opportunities are used, not only for enrichment but to reinforce safety culture.
There is also a wider “Azhar Academy” story that includes building conversion and adaptation as part of the institution’s development. A school newsletter describes the reworking of a Victorian-era church building into educational space, including the introduction of mezzanine classrooms within the nave, presented as an example of making heritage premises work for modern schooling. It is helpful context for families who care about how a school’s physical environment has evolved, even if day-to-day experience is ultimately shaped more by routines, teaching, and relationships.
At GCSE level, the school’s headline metrics are strong. The Attainment 8 score is 63.2, and the EBacc average point score is 5.8.
The school also performs well in relative terms within the FindMySchool rankings. Ranked 481st in England and 2nd in Newham for GCSE outcomes (FindMySchool ranking based on official data), it sits above England average, placing it comfortably within the top 25% of schools in England. For parents, that combination matters: it indicates both a solid national position and a particularly strong local standing.
It is also worth understanding what is not central to the results picture here. As an independent school, it is not compelled to publish the same standardised primary-phase outcomes that many families use for quick comparisons, so the most comparable academic signal in the public domain is the secondary performance and the external evaluation of curriculum quality and safeguarding.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
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% of students achieving grades 9-7
A defining feature here is the dual offer: a full secular curriculum alongside Aalimah, Hifz, and Islamic Studies pathways. The school’s published fees documentation explicitly states that the annual fee covers both the faith-based course elements and secular subjects, which is a direct indication that the school views this as a single integrated educational model rather than an optional add-on.
From an inspection perspective, the most recent report describes a school where pupils are happy and safe, and where relationships across age groups support wellbeing and good conduct. That kind of environment tends to support learning because it reduces low-level disruption and increases lesson time spent on teaching rather than behaviour management.
For families, the practical implication is that the academic offer is likely to suit students who respond well to clear boundaries, predictable routines, and a values-led framework. Students who need a looser structure, later starts, or a more informal daily rhythm may find the intensity harder to sustain, especially across winter months.
With the upper age capped at 16, progression is about post-16 routes rather than sixth form pathways. The school’s own student-facing material includes guidance aimed at preparing students for the next step, including practical advice on applying to colleges and getting organised early.
The implication is that families should think ahead about what “good progression” looks like for their child at 16. Some will prioritise A-level-heavy sixth forms; others will want technical or vocational routes. What matters is that the school’s GCSE profile and culture prepares students for competitive post-16 options, then families match that to the right destination.
Admissions are time-sensitive for 2026 entry. The school publishes a February 2026 entrance exam cycle with a clear sequence of deadlines and next steps:
Application deadline: Friday 30 January 2026
Entrance exam: Saturday 7 February 2026
School reference deadline: Wednesday 25 February 2026
Entrance exam results: Friday 27 February 2026
Interviews: 14 April 2026 to 16 April 2026 (week commencing)
Registration and confirmation of space: Wednesday 22 April 2026
Given today’s date (25 January 2026), the first deadline is imminent. Families considering a late application should treat this as urgent planning rather than a “research later” decision. The safest approach is to confirm exactly which entry point the February exam relates to (for example, whether it is targeted at a particular year group), then align your child’s preparation and paperwork accordingly.
Because this is an independent school, admissions are not LA-coordinated in the same way as a state school. The key practical point is that families need to follow the school’s process and timelines closely, and build in time for references and interviews.
The most recent inspection presents a reassuring safeguarding picture, with pupils reporting that they feel safe, and with older students taking an active role in helping younger pupils understand risks and make safe choices. The latest Ofsted inspection (19 March 2024) rated the school Outstanding.
A pastoral model built around clear expectations also shows up in policies focused on attendance and punctuality. While policy documents are not the same as lived experience, they do demonstrate what leadership considers non-negotiable: consistent attendance, punctual arrival, and defined consequences for repeated lateness. For families, that signals a school where boundaries are explicit rather than implied.
This school’s enrichment picture is best understood as a blend of student leadership, communication skills, and project-based opportunities.
One established example is participation in the BBC School Report activity, presented through the school’s own communications as a structured student media project. The value here is practical: students develop scripting, teamwork, and presentation skills, then learn how to plan and deliver work to a deadline, which maps closely to GCSE-era demands.
A second strand is academic support and extension through targeted sessions such as Homework Club, referenced within school materials and student writing. The benefit is straightforward: extra supervised time for consolidation can reduce homework friction at home and improve consistency for students who need structure to complete independent tasks.
A third strand is confidence-building and leadership development. Student writing describes public speaking training and workshop experiences, including structured sessions designed to help older students present in front of groups and handle interviews. For many teenagers, this is a genuine advantage because it strengthens the “soft skills” needed for college applications and later employment, not only exam performance.
Fees are published on the school’s own documentation. For the academic year 2025/2026, the annual school fee is £4,350 per year. The same document also shows a full annual payment figure including VAT of £4,956.68.
The published fee policy also sets out one-off and recurring administrative charges. It states a one-off registration fee of £500 in the first year of enrolment, and an annual re-registration fee of £100 for pupils already on roll.
For nursery-age children, families should check the school’s own current early years information directly, as pricing structures for younger ages can operate differently and should be confirmed from the most current official source before budgeting.
On financial support, the publicly available fees documentation focuses on payment structures and does not set out bursary or scholarship programmes in the same level of detail as some independent schools. Families for whom fees are a stretch should raise financial options early as part of the admissions conversation, rather than assuming support is unavailable.
*Bursaries may be available for eligible families.
Basis: per year
The day begins early. Aalimah and Hifz students start at 7.25am Monday to Thursday, while Islamic Studies students start at 7.55am Monday to Thursday; on Fridays, the stated start time is 7.30am for all students.
A school transport map identifies Stratford High Street and Litchfield Avenue as nearby bus stop options, and notes Stratford High Street as the closest tube or train station reference point.
As the school includes early years, parents of younger children should ask directly about any breakfast or after-school arrangements and booking expectations, since wraparound provision varies significantly between all-through independent schools and is not consistently published in one standard format.
Early starts are a genuine lifestyle factor. A 7.25am start for some pathways changes morning routines for the whole household, particularly with younger siblings. Families should test whether this is sustainable across the year, not only at the start of term.
Fee structures include additional elements beyond the headline rate. The published policy includes VAT treatment and separate registration and re-registration fees, plus references to extra costs such as external exam fees and uniform. Budgeting works best when these are included from the outset.
Progression planning starts earlier because the school finishes at 16. Families should think about post-16 routes by Year 10 at the latest so that GCSE options and college choices align with your child’s intended pathway.
A strongly structured independent all-through school where routines, punctuality, and an integrated faith-and-secular curriculum shape daily life. GCSE outcomes and local standing are clear strengths, and the safeguarding culture benefits from student leadership as well as adult systems. Best suited to families who actively want a disciplined framework and an early-start rhythm, and whose child is likely to respond well to clear expectations and steady academic push.
The latest Ofsted inspection (19 March 2024) rated the school Outstanding. GCSE performance is also strong, with the school ranked 481st in England and 2nd in Newham for GCSE outcomes in the FindMySchool ranking based on official data.
For 2025/2026, the published annual fee is £4,350 per year, with the same documentation showing a full annual payment including VAT of £4,956.68. The policy also states a £500 registration fee in the first year and a £100 annual re-registration fee for continuing pupils.
The school publishes a February 2026 entrance exam timeline, with applications due by Friday 30 January 2026 and the exam on Saturday 7 February 2026. The schedule also lists dates for references, results, interviews, and registration confirmation through April 2026.
The stated start times differ by pathway. Aalimah and Hifz students start at 7.25am Monday to Thursday, Islamic Studies students start at 7.55am Monday to Thursday, and on Fridays the stated start time is 7.30am for all students.
School materials reference structured opportunities such as the BBC School Report activity, alongside academic support such as Homework Club and confidence-building workshops referenced in student writing. The common thread is practical skill-building, communication, and leadership rather than only sport-based enrichment.
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