By Desire Tshuma
Harare – Suneagles Junior & Nursery School is relaunching its exclusive Grade 1 class at the Belvedere campus for January 2027 intake, while also expanding access to learners with special educational needs.
For 11 years the Christian-based school at No. 7 Blakeway Drive, Belvedere, has built its reputation on a 1:15 teacher-pupil ratio, a safe English-speaking environment, and a broad extra-curriculum that includes swimming, computers, art & craft, music, baking, gymnastics, theatre and public speaking.
“We identify and nurture talent in a clean, safe space where children are loved and challenged,” said Madam Dorcas Chamatunhu, Principal, Director and Founder of Suneagles Junior & Nursery School. “For 11 years our focus has been on laying a strong foundation – academically, socially, and spiritually – so that every child can fly to the sun like eagles.”
Suneagles enrols children from 12 months in Baby Class through Toddlers, ECD A, ECD B, and now Grade 1 at Belvedere. The school also has limited vacancies for learners with Special Needs, with a focus on supporting autistic children and those with delayed speech and ADHD. Services include weekly boarding, transport, nutritious meals, educational trips, birthday parties and talent-nurturing programmes.
With Grade 1 places strictly limited, Suneagles is running an early-bird offer: parents who enrol between now and August receive special discounts and free uniforms. Registration requires a birth certificate copy, passport-size photo, latest school report and parents’ IDs.
The school opened a second branch in Budiriro Cabs last year, currently offering classes up to ECD B.
Contact: 0775 237 545 | 0719 237 545 | 0242 748 461
Email:suneaglesnursery@gmail.com
Facebook: Suneagles Junior & Nursery School
Madam Chamatunhu said the Grade 1 relaunch and expanded Special Needs support respond to growing demand from parents. “We’re bringing the Suneagles standard of care and excellence to more families, while ensuring that children with different learning needs also have a place to thrive,” she said.