Hundreds of Students Fail to Sign Partnership Agreement, Schools Reveal Lists
Schools across the UAE are scrambling to get parents to sign a mandatory "Partnership Charter" through the parent portal platform. The digital document isn't optional - students' academic records and semester results depend on it, creating urgency as the first semester draws to a close.
The Partnership Charter serves as an educational agreement that clarifies roles between schools and parents for the 2025-2026 academic year. School administrations explain it promotes transparency and shared responsibility in the learning process. Parents with multiple children must sign separate charters for each student.
Schools have provided step-by-step instructions for the digital signing process. Parents log into the Ministry's system using their ID credentials, select their child's emirate, update contact information like addresses and phone numbers, then navigate to their children's profiles to sign individual charters.
The push has intensified over recent days. Schools are sending text messages and posting daily lists of students whose parents haven't completed the signing process yet. This constant communication reflects how directly the charter links to approving first semester results.
Here's where it gets interesting from an administrative perspective. The mandatory nature of this digital agreement represents a shift toward more formalized parent-school partnerships in the UAE's education system. Schools are essentially requiring parents to digitally commit to their role in their child's education before academic progress can be officially recorded.
School administrations stress that parent compliance ensures smooth academic operations. They frame the requirement as necessary cooperation that benefits students' educational outcomes. But the urgent messaging and daily reminder lists suggest some parents are either unaware of the requirement or struggling with the digital platform.
The timing creates additional pressure. With first semester results pending, parents face a clear deadline that directly affects their children's academic standing. Schools are banking on this connection to drive completion rates before the semester officially ends.
Omar Rahman