Oman, Seeb
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Indian School Al Seeb is an English-medium co-educational school established in 2002. It is approved by the Ministry of Education, Oman, and affiliated to the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) in New Delhi. The school is located in Mabellah, Seeb, on a campus of about 13,000 square metres that includes a playfield, a basketball court, computer science labs, science labs, spacious classrooms, an audio-visual room, a multi-purpose hall, a canteen and ample parking. The medium of instruction is English; Hindi, Malayalam or Tamil are offered as second languages up to Class V, with Hindi or Malayalam continuing for Classes VI–VIII. From Class V to VIII, Hindi, Malayalam, Arabic, Tamil, Sanskrit and French are offered as third languages. In Class IX, Hindi, Malayalam, Arabic and Tamil are provided as second language options, and in Class X, Hindi, Malayalam and Arabic are offered as second languages. The school offers Science, Commerce and Humanities streams up to Senior Secondary, with electives such as Informatics Practices, Computer Science, Psychology, Economics, Entrepreneurship, Marketing, Physical Education, Information Technology and Fine Arts (Painting). Extracurriculars include sports and performance arts, with documented participation in CBSE Oman Zone and national level competitions.
2445, PC: 111 Seeb, Sultanate of Oman
Indian School Al Seeb has 3,000 pupils, typical class sizes of 20, instruction in English.
Indian School Al Seeb is located in Mabellah, Seeb, within the Muscat Governorate, Oman. The school's own materials note Mabellah as the location, with Reach Us details listing PO Box 2445, PC 111, Seeb, Oman, and contact numbers +968 24451424 and +968 24451353. The Mabellah campus is described as the school's site in its history overview.
ISAS uses a four-tier structure: KG (Kindergarten), Primary, Middle, and Senior (Senior Secondary). The site's navigation highlights these levels, indicating a progression from early years through to pre-university grades.
ISAS is an English-medium, co-educational school. It operates under the Ministry of Education in Oman and is affiliated to CBSE, New Delhi, India.
Care & Special Education (CSE) is available through the Indian Schools in Oman network, described as a Home Away from Home for children with special needs aged 4 to 18 years. This SEN provision is part of the network and accessible across its schools, including IS Seeb.
The school is affiliated to the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE), New Delhi, India.
Religious affiliation is not stated publicly. The school presents itself as part of the Indian Schools Oman network, with English as the medium of instruction and a focus on holistic education.
The school year/week follows a Sunday-to-Thursday schedule. The 8:30 am to 2:00 pm day pattern is consistent with CBSE/Oman listings for Indian-curriculum schools in the region.
IS Seeb operates a school transport system through a private operator, National Distance Trading LLC (Azaiba). Buses are equipped with CCTV, seat belts, IVMS, emergency exits, and an on-board assistant; a school staff member monitors pick-up/drop-off. The transport system began with four routes and six buses and is overseen by the school's transport governance framework to ensure safety and reliability.
Annual tuition at Indian School Al Seeb ranges from OMR 474 to OMR 594 for 2026/27.
Indian School Al Seeb teaches Indian Curriculum for students aged 3 to 18.
Indian School Al Seeb is an English-medium, co-educational school in Seeb that is affiliated with the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) and was established in 2002. The curriculum runs from Balvatika (early years) to Class XII and follows the CBSE framework, with a detailed class-by-class subject structure published for 2025-2026. Balvatika and KG I–II focus on literacy, numeracy, general awareness, and language development, while Classes I–II include English and a second language (Hindi/Malayalam/Tamil), progressing to a third language option in Classes III–V (with French available for Class V) and core subjects such as Mathematics, Environmental Studies and Art. Classes VI–VIII add a third language option (including French) and cover English, second and third language choices, Mathematics, Science, Social Science, Art/Music/Dance, ICT and Physical Education, with Tamil as a 2nd language in VI–VII. Classes IX–X offer English Language & Literature, a choice of second languages (including French for Class IX), Mathematics, Science, Social Science, Art/Music/Dance, Health & Physical Education, and Computer Applications/ Painting for specific needs. In Classes XI–XII, Science Streams include combinations of Physics, Chemistry, Biology with Mathematics or Informatics Practices/Psychology; Commerce Streams include multiple groupings with Accountancy, Business Studies, Economics and optional subjects such as IT or Entrepreneurship; Humanities Streams include Sociology, Economics/IT and Psychology, complemented by compulsory ICT, Work Experience, Physical Education and General Studies, plus a range of Skill Subjects.
ISAS aims to develop each child's emotional and social potential as part of holistic development, with learning set in a safe, happy and supportive environment and a dedicated team of mentors.
The mission states it assimilates individual differences and learning styles, indicating an inclusive approach. No explicit information about a dedicated SEN department or specialist SEN provision is publicly disclosed.
The medium of instruction is English; Hindi, Malayalam, or Tamil are used as second languages in the lower years, with additional languages such as Hindi, Malayalam, Arabic, Tamil, Sanskrit and French offered in later grades to fulfill the third language requirement.
Mental wellbeing is supported through emphasis on emotional and social development within a safe, happy and supportive environment, complemented by a dedicated mentoring framework to address individual needs.
Safeguarding is supported by a discipline framework that includes counseling and a formal grievance redress mechanism for concerns.
1. Online registration and initial eligibility: Parents register through the centralized online system for Indian Schools in the capital area. For the 2025–2026 cycle, online registrations ran from January 20, 2025 to February 20, 2025, with a non-refundable processing fee of 15 OMR per application. For the 2026–2027 cycle, online registration opens on January 21, 2026 and closes February 21, 2026; the processing fee remains 15 OMR per application. The portal used for Indian nationals is the Indian Schools Oman system, and the school link is listed within the admissions flow.
2. BOD allotment (seat allocation): After online registration, the Board of Directors (BOD) conducts an allotment process to determine allotments across ISAS seats. This is depicted as the BOD–ALLOTMENT step in the admissions sequence, signaling the formal assignment of a seat or a slot for the applicant. Parents then receive an intimation via SMS or email about the outcome and next steps.
3. Intimation and document submission: Following BOD allotment, the school informs parents by SMS/email of the next steps and the need to submit all required documents at Indian School Al Seeb (ISAS). The required documents differ by stage: KG I, KG II, and Classes I–IX each have specific document lists (birth certificate, passport and visa pages, resident card, immunization/health card, photos, and Transfer Certificate for older classes). KG I requires birth certificate, child and parent passport/visa copies, health/immunization card, photos, and embassy NOC/undertaking if applicable; KG II adds the original Transfer/Leaving Certificate and previous class mark sheet; Classes I–IX require the same core documents plus the original Transfer/Leaving Certificate and previous class marks. The list is presented in the Admissions section of the site.
4. Verification of documents: After submission, ISAS conducts verification of the documents provided. This step ensures that documents are authentic, complete, and meet the school's requirements before proceeding to formal approval. Families may be asked to supply additional information if needed.
5. Principal's approval: The school's administration reviews the verified documents and grants Principal's approval if all criteria are met. This approval is necessary before generating a general number (GR No) and allocating a section. Parents should expect communication from the school once the Principal's review is complete.
6. GR No generation / section allotment: Upon approval, a GR number is generated and a class/section allotment is assigned based on availability and the parent's preferences. This step fixes the student's place in a specific class and section, and prepares the student for fee processing and final admission confirmation.
7. Payment of fee: The next step is the payment of applicable fees as part of the admission process. The fee schedule includes an admission processing fee (paid earlier in the process) and new-admission-related deposits; the fee structure also contains details on annual/quarterly payment options and late fines. Note that the admissions FAQ explains how to pay the processing fee and confirms it is non-refundable. Parents should follow the school's fee cycle and due-date rules as published.
8. Admission confirmation: After payment and completion of all documentation, ISAS confirms admission via email. Parents should expect a confirmation notice to finalize the enrollment.
9. Additional context and age eligibility: For Balvatika, KG I, KG II and Class I, ISAS follows age guidelines aligned to NEP 2020 and CBSE expectations: Balvatika requires the child to be 3+ years by March 31, 2025; KG I requires 4+ years; KG II requires 5+ years; Class I requires 6+ years by the same date. These age criteria are outlined in the admissions FAQs.
10. Documentation and eligibility notes: In addition to standard documents, Indian nationals have priority in the online process, with other nationalities considered after Indian nationals, subject to seat availability. The admissions FAQ also notes that if a school has vacancies, seats may be allocated; inter-school transfers are possible after allotment, and higher-class admissions (X/XII) may require direct school contact.
The ISAS admissions materials do not describe a scholarship program.
The school describes admissions as contingent on seat availability and, in the 2025–2026 FAQ, all accepted applications go through a computerized random draw based on parent preference and seat availability. The seat-allocation process is class-wise, school-wise, and choice-wise, and is subject to availability. There is no publicly described separate waitlist. The process uses a draw to allocate seats. Inter-school transfers are handled after allotment and require direct school action for classes X and XII.