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The Aga Khan Academies is an initiative of the Aga Khan Development Network. When fully operational, the Aga Khan Academies network will consist of eighteen co-educational, K-12, non-denominational day and residential schools in fourteen countries in Africa , South and Central Asia , and the Middle East . [ 1 ]
Mathematics (Syllabus E) (Brunei) — Yes — Brunei only; last exam in 2010 — CIE 4029 Mathematics (Syllabus D) (Mauritius) No Yes Yes Mauritius only; cannot be combined with syllabuses 0580 & 0581 , 4021 & 4024 (O Level) syllabus [permanent dead link ] CIE 4037 Additional Mathematics: Yes Yes Yes Common with syllabus 0606 link: CIE 4038
Most IGCSE subjects offer a choice of tiered examinations: Core or Extended papers (in Cambridge International), and Foundation or Higher papers (in Edexcel). This is designed to make IGCSE suitable for students with varying levels of ability. In some subjects, IGCSE can be taken with or without coursework.
The Aga Khan Academies are a network of residential schools for talented students spanning from Africa and the Middle East, to South and Central Asia. [2] Admission is means-blind and based on merit. Financial aid is available to ensure access for accepted students regardless of financial circumstances, although is only applicable to Indian ...
Aga Khan School may refer to the following (listed in order by country): Aga Khan Education Services, with more than 200 schools Aga Khan Academies; Aga Khan School, Dhaka, Bangladesh; Aga Khan Academy, Hyderabad, India; Aga Khan Academy, Nairobi, Kenya; Aga Khan Junior Academy, Nairobi, Kenya; Aga Khan School, Osh, Kyrgyzstan
The Aga Khan School, Dhaka, is an English Medium School, in Uttara, Dhaka [2] [3] under the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) [1] and the Aga Khan Education Service, Bangladesh (AKES,B). [2] It is one of the earliest private English Medium schools in Bangladesh founded in 1988, [ 4 ] in a small campus in Siddeshwari, Dhaka.
AKES operates more than 300 schools internationally, in Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Uganda, Tanzania and Tajikistan. Schools are also envisaged, or under development, in Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Madagascar, Mali, Mozambique and Syria.
In 1905, Aga Khan III started the Aga Khan School in Mundra, the first school what later became a large network of schools, AKES. AKES currently operates more than 300 schools and advanced educational programmes that provide quality pre-school, primary, secondary, and higher secondary education services to more than 54,000 students in Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, and ...