A small, academically focused boys’ secondary in Tower Hamlets, this school combines a full Key Stage 3 and GCSE curriculum with a structured Islamic studies programme, including dedicated Hifz time built into the day. It is selective at entry, with a published admissions examination and interview stage, and it remains relatively compact, with capacity listed at 250 and around 190 pupils on roll in the most recent official data.
The current principal is Mr Nojarul Islam, and the role was filled as a permanent appointment in early 2016, following interim leadership.
Inspection evidence is current and strong. The most recent standard inspection (4 to 6 February 2025) awarded Outstanding for overall effectiveness, as well as Outstanding judgements across education, behaviour and attitudes, personal development, and leadership and management.
This is a school that sets a clear tone around conduct, community responsibility, and purposeful learning. The culture is structured, with high expectations for behaviour and for academic habits, and it is underpinned by a strong sense of togetherness and respect between year groups.
Daily rhythms are distinctive. The published timetable places Hifz at the start of the day, before the main academic schedule begins; lunch includes a dedicated prayer slot; and after-school time is reserved for intervention and clubs on set afternoons. For families seeking a school day that visibly integrates faith practice with mainstream academic study, those choices will feel like a feature rather than an add-on.
Leadership is presented in a straightforward, accessible way through staff listings and safeguarding contacts, with a clear set of named responsibilities (including designated safeguarding roles). That clarity matters in a small school where families often value direct lines of accountability.
On the data available for GCSE phase outcomes, performance sits well above typical benchmarks. The average Attainment 8 score is 67.7, and the school’s average EBacc APS is 6.62.
In FindMySchool’s proprietary ranking based on official data, the school is ranked 300th in England for GCSE outcomes, and 1st locally in Tower Hamlets. That England position translates to outperforming around 90% of schools in England, placing it in the top 10%.
For parents weighing options across the borough, the FindMySchool Local Hub and Comparison Tool can help you view these outcomes alongside nearby schools on a like-for-like basis, particularly useful where cohorts and school sizes vary.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
GCSE 9–7
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% of students achieving grades 9-7
Curriculum breadth is a theme in the school’s own documentation and in the most recent inspection evidence. Core provision includes English language and literature, mathematics, sciences (including pathways up to triple science), humanities, computing and computer science, religious education, physical education, and creative subjects, alongside modern languages that include Arabic and Bengali or Urdu.
Arabic is not treated as a marginal option. It is described as a compulsory subject from Year 7 to Year 11, with GCSE Arabic in Years 10 and 11, and there is also an Arabic Speaking Club to extend spoken fluency beyond lessons.
The most recent inspection describes a curriculum that is broad, balanced, and ambitious, and it highlights the way teaching checks prior learning and builds knowledge systematically over time. In practical terms, families should expect lessons that prioritise clarity, recall, and strong subject vocabulary, with an emphasis on reading across subjects rather than confining it to English lessons.
As an 11 to 16 school, the main transition point is post-16. The school’s curriculum pages reference progression to a range of sixth forms and colleges across London, naming examples such as Brampton Manor Academy, London Academy of Excellence, and City and Islington College. The school does not publish a quantified destination breakdown on the pages reviewed, so it is best read as indicative rather than a guaranteed pattern.
The most recent inspection states that pupils progress on to further education establishments, which aligns with the school’s emphasis on a full GCSE programme and structured careers education.
Admissions are explicitly selective and staged. For September 2026 entry, the school published a deadline of 30 October 2025, with a three-stage process: application, an admissions examination in mathematics and English plus CAT4, then an interview for candidates who pass the tests. Places are limited, with the school stating up to 33 places per year group.
Given today’s date (25 January 2026), those specific deadlines are in the past. However, because the school publishes an annual application cycle anchored in autumn deadlines, families should assume that the next cycle will follow a similar pattern and should check the admissions pages for the latest dates as they are released.
Where distance-based admissions dominate many London schools, this model is different. Families typically need to engage early, understand the assessment format, and plan realistically around preparation and fit. If you are comparing schools across the area, use FindMySchoolMap Search to check travel practicality from your front door, even when admissions are not distance-based, because day-to-day commute still shapes school experience.
Safeguarding information is clearly structured, with named designated leads published by the school. This supports transparency for parents and also signals an expectation that students know which adults hold safeguarding responsibilities.
The latest inspection confirms that safeguarding arrangements are effective.
Beyond compliance, the school’s pastoral approach appears closely tied to its culture of behaviour, shared standards, and peer responsibility. For many boys, especially in a smaller setting, that can translate into consistent routines and strong adult oversight. For some, it may feel more formal than a larger comprehensive where students can blend into the background.
Extracurricular life is framed as an extension of both academic and faith objectives rather than a separate sphere. There is an explicit after-school slot for intervention and clubs, which matters for families who want enrichment to be built into the weekly routine rather than left to ad hoc lunchtime societies.
Specific examples are available in the published curriculum and enrichment information. The school references clubs and activities including Debating, Reading, Sports, and Coding, and it highlights participation in the Duke of Edinburgh Award as part of its enhanced curriculum offer.
There are also school-specific opportunities that flow directly from curriculum choices. The Arabic Speaking Club is positioned as a practical extension of GCSE Arabic, supporting oral confidence and fluency.
For families prioritising Hifz, the timetable makes clear that memorisation is treated as a core strand rather than an optional supplement, with early morning periods devoted to it. That design will suit students who respond well to structured study blocks and consistent repetition.
Tuition fees for the 2025 to 2026 academic year are published as £6,120 per annum (including VAT) for Years 7 to 11. The same fee policy document lists an entry test fee of £30 and an admission fee of £144 (including VAT).
The published policy also states that tuition fees exclude uniform, textbooks, lunch, trips, and GCSE examination fees, so families should budget for a set of additional costs across the year.
On financial support, the school actively invites donations to fund bursaries for families experiencing hardship, including single-parent families and orphans. The available information does not set out a published eligibility threshold or a percentage of pupils supported, so families who may need assistance should ask directly what is currently available and how it is assessed.
Fees data coming soon.
The published daily timetable begins with Hifz from 7:30am, with the main academic day running from 9:25am registration through a 3:30pm finish, followed by an intervention and clubs slot until 4:30pm. A separate Ramadan timetable is also published, indicating that schedules change seasonally to reflect religious observance.
For transport, Shadwell provides nearby rail connections, including DLR and London Overground services, and it is a practical reference point when mapping the school run.
Wraparound care in the primary sense is not applicable here, but after-school provision is structured through the scheduled intervention and clubs block rather than informal supervision.
Selective entry and limited places. With a published admissions test and interview stage, as well as up to 33 places per year group, admission is a key constraint and requires early planning.
A longer day than many secondary schools. A 7:30am start for Hifz plus an after-school slot to 4:30pm can suit motivated students, but it does require sustained stamina, especially alongside commuting.
Additional costs beyond tuition. Tuition is not the whole budget, with uniform, textbooks, lunch, trips, and GCSE exam fees listed separately from the annual fee.
Faith-integrated routines. Prayer and Islamic studies are structurally embedded in the day, which is a strong fit for many families, but it is not a neutral add-on and should align with your child’s readiness for that level of integration.
For families seeking an independent, academically ambitious boys’ secondary where Islamic education and Hifz are integrated into the daily structure, this school offers a clear and coherent model. Current external evidence supports a strong picture on culture, curriculum ambition, and safeguarding, while the FindMySchool GCSE ranking places outcomes well above England norms.
Best suited to boys who respond well to structure, high expectations, and a timetable that extends beyond the typical day, and to families willing to engage early with a selective admissions process.
The most recent standard inspection (February 2025) awarded Outstanding overall, with Outstanding judgements across the key inspection areas. On GCSE outcomes, FindMySchool’s ranking places it 300th in England, which equates to the top 10% nationally in England terms.
For the 2025 to 2026 academic year, the published tuition fee is £6,120 per annum (including VAT) for Years 7 to 11. The published policy also lists a £30 entry test fee and a £144 admission fee (including VAT), and it flags additional costs such as uniform, trips, lunch, textbooks, and GCSE exam fees.
The school publishes a three-stage process: application, an admissions examination in maths and English plus CAT4, then an interview for candidates who pass the tests. For September 2026 entry, the published deadline was 30 October 2025, so families applying for later years should look for the equivalent autumn deadline in the next cycle.
The published timetable starts with Hifz at 7:30am, with the main academic day following, and a scheduled after-school intervention and clubs slot running to 4:30pm. A separate Ramadan timetable is also published, so families should expect seasonal adjustments to timings.
Published enrichment references include debating, reading, sports, and coding, and the school lists participation in the Duke of Edinburgh Award. There is also an Arabic Speaking Club, which supports spoken fluency alongside GCSE Arabic study.
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