Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
On the encouragement of the local Indian community, Rafiuddin S. Fazulbhoy started the school on a small scale in 1969. It was then called "Embassy of India School, Jeddah". The construction of the present girls' section started in 1982 with the foundation stone laid by Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and was completed in 1984. The ...
Korean School in Jeddah (KISJ, Korean: 젯다한국학교) [3] It was established on 18 September 1976. On 2 June of that year the Middle East Economic Cooperation Working Committee decided to establish the school, with a preparation committee formed on 5 August.
International Indian School Jeddah; International Philippine School in Jeddah This page was last edited on 11 February 2024, at 23:43 (UTC). Text ...
The American International School of Jeddah (AISJ; Arabic: المدرسة الأمریکیة العالمیة بجدة), or the "American School" in short, is an international school with American curriculum in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Established in 1952, the American International School of Jeddah is a U.S. accredited Pre-K - 12 college ...
International Indian School Jubail or IISJ (formerly Indian Embassy School Jubail) is an English-medium K-12 Indian school in Al Jubail of Saudi Arabia.It was founded on 30 November 1987.
Hala International School (HIS) (Arabic: مدرسة هلا العالمية, romanized: Madrasah Hala al-ʿĀlamīyah) was a K–12 gender-isolated English-medium multicultural international school in the al-Aziziyah neighborhood of Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, active from 1991 to 2018 and served students across 24 different nationalities from the city, mostly the Pakistani diaspora.
International Philippine School in Jeddah (IPSJ; Arabic: المدرسة الفلبينية العالمية بجدة) is a Philippine international school in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. [1] It serves levels pre-elementary through senior high school. [2] As of 2005 it had over 1,000 students, making it the world's largest Philippine international ...
IISR logo until 2022. In the wake of a sudden and exponential influx of Indian workers and professionals in Saudi Arabia as a consequence of the 1973 energy crisis and subsequent oil boom, the new generation of expatriate families in the country struggled to provide their children with quality-education as the British and American schools were costly enough get enrolled, and thus, infeasible.