Jordan, Amman
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The Jubilee School is a co-educational, nonprofit boarding secondary school in Amman, Jordan. It serves grades 9–12 and enrolls around 500 meritorious students, with class sizes not exceeding 25 per section. The campus supports a blended learning and STEAM approach, with labs for chemistry, electronics, biology, robotics, and computer studies, plus a dormitory infrastructure for boarding students. The school operates a two-semester calendar (September–January and February–June) with about 195 days in a school year. The Jubilee School offers Jordanian Tawjihi, IGCSE and Cambridge A-Level tracks, and provides scholarships for the national program; a Graduation Project requires a 120-hour community service component. The Jubilee Institute also runs University Counseling and extensive student life programs and participates in national and international STEAM competitions such as First Lego League and F1 in Schools.
Muhammad An-Nejdawi St., Amman, Jordan
Jubilee School (Jubilee Institute) has 500 pupils, typical class sizes of 25, instruction in English, Arabic.
The Jubilee Institute is located in Amman, Jordan. It serves students from across the country, including distant provinces, and provides on-site boarding for those who cannot commute daily. Boarding is available on campus, and for some governorates (Salt, Madaba, and Zarqa) a bus service is provided to facilitate daily travel to the school. The campus also notes that students may come from outside Jordan.
The Jubilee School operates a four-year secondary program for grades 9–12. It is a co-educational, non-governmental, non-profit boarding school focused on students with high academic ability.
The school is independent and non-profit, with on-site boarding facilities. It is co-educational and affiliated with Jordan as a national program for gifted students.
The school targets high-ability learners and offers an integrated program with STEAM and related advanced-cyriculum initiatives. Specific formal SEN services are not listed; the materials emphasize gifted education rather than general SEN supports.
Jordan.
No religious affiliation is publicly listed.
The school follows a two-semester system from September to January and February to June. Classes run from 8:00 to 15:30, with a 40-minute period length, and there are 195 school days per year.
Bus services are provided for the governorates of Salt, Madaba, and Zarqa to enable daily commuting. The school also accommodates students arriving from abroad.
Annual tuition at Jubilee School (Jubilee Institute) ranges from JOD 4,200 to JOD 7,750 for 2026/27.
Jubilee School (Jubilee Institute) teaches Bespoke Curriculum, Cambridge IGCSE, Cambridge A Levels for students aged 14 to 18.
The Jubilee School offers a four-year secondary program for grades 9–12. Students may pursue the Jordanian General Secondary Education Certificate (Tawjihi) or the International General Certificate of Secondary Education (IGCSE) with Cambridge International A-Levels. The curriculum blends a STEAM-focused, blended-learning approach to develop critical thinking, problem solving, and civic responsibility, and includes a Graduation Project as a capstone in which students prototype an innovative solution. A Jubilee Co-Curricula program requires 10 electives from 50+ options (including Artificial Intelligence and Bioethics) and includes enhanced courses to support personal development. University Counseling supports higher education progression, and the school hosts a Scientific Research Unit to foster research and leadership; boarding is available for students from distant regions.
8:1
100% of Jubilee School graduates are admitted to universities and colleges in Jordan and abroad.
University Counseling helps students plan and apply to higher education; graduates typically proceed to universities domestically and internationally, aided by the school's programs.
The Jubilee School is designed for Jordanian gifted students and operates with a selective admissions process based on multiple criteria for entry.
Jubilee School supports Social and Emotional Learning through the Jubilee Personal Development Program, designed to equip students with life skills such as research, leadership, entrepreneurship, project management, productive thinking, and knowledge on human rights.
The Jubilee School is a boarding secondary school for high-ability or gifted students; there is no publicly disclosed information about dedicated SEN provisions or specialist SEN facilities.
Public information does not describe a dedicated EAL program; English is used in admissions and there are English admission guides, but explicit EAL support is not documented.
Health Services exist on campus as part of Student Life, and Safety & Security are highlighted, but there is no publicly disclosed detail about formal mental wellbeing programs.
Safety and Security are listed as a component of Student Life, but specific safeguarding policies are not publicly described.
1. The Jubilee School (Jubilee Institute) uses a clearly defined, three-stage admissions path designed for academically strong applicants. First, nominations open in December each year; applications must be submitted electronically by an applicant who is in grade 8 and is either Jordanian or has a valid residency. Applicants must demonstrate academic excellence and meet the school's multi-criteria standards, which include high averages from the last three semesters, performance on the Jubilee Scholastic Aptitude Test (JSAT), an Evaluation of Potential Creativity (EPoC), Creative Writing, an English test for 10th grade if applicable, and a personal interview. After submitting the application, families receive instructions by email on how to proceed with the initial application fees so the candidate can advance to testing.
2. Testing is conducted on dates announced by the school. Testing consists of the Jubilee Scholastic Aptitude Test (JSAT) with 100 questions over about 135 minutes, covering verbal, mathematical and logical sections; the EPoC assessment to gauge creative potential; and an Expressive Writing task (a 150-word paragraph, in Arabic or English). The English 10th-grade language requirement may apply for the national program, and the assessment package concludes with a personal statement and a structured interview. Dates for tests are published on the school's platforms and through the Ministry of Education.
3. The personal interview lasts about 20–30 minutes and is conducted by a committee of teachers and educators. It serves to identify behavioral traits, leadership aspirations, and alignment with the school's program and values. During the interview, applicants learn more about Jubilee School life and have an opportunity to ask questions about programs and campus life. If the candidate meets the admission criteria and performs well in testing and interview, the school proceeds to the next steps.
4. Formal registration follows a successful admission decision. The student is officially registered after fees are paid and the academic file is submitted to the Admission Department. All admitted students must attend a three-week Summer School to prepare for school life and the program; transfer procedures and Summer School dates are communicated via the school's Edunation platform after fee payment and registration completion. If guardians fail to pay by the specified dates, the seat and any scholarship offered may be forfeited. In addition to the core admission steps, there is a boarding option on campus with two gender-segregated dormitories, with supervision and furnished rooms; there is also a preparatory Summer School and a boarding service for provincial students. These components may be relevant to families considering the overall transition process and housing needs.
The Jubilee School offers full or partial scholarships to a number of students in the national program who meet the admission requirements. The value of the scholarship depends on the family's gross income and covers school fees and internal housing for students from the north and south governorates and from outside the Kingdom; it does not cover books, school uniforms, or transportation. Continuation of the scholarship depends on maintaining a specified academic average. Parents may apply for financial aid after the admissions testing results are announced. The scholarship program is described as part of the national program, with details about eligibility and coverage provided in the admission and tuition materials.
There is no published waitlist or pool system described for Jubilee School admissions.