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BILLIONS TO BE SPENT ON
REFORMING SAUDI EDUCATION

Company executives and employers in the private sector are not the only ones complaining about the low quality of public education in Saudi Arabia. The disappointment of university professors is even greater. They face the challenging and nearly impossible task of having to deliver a university level education and lecture to students who lack the very basic study skills and the skills of reading, writing and comprehension, students who have no background whatsoever in elementary science and mathematics. You present them with a rational argument based on logical principles and scientific method and backed by scientific facts, but they retort with citations from the Quran and religious sayings to prove to you that among the ancients a man lived to a thousand years and was so tall that he crossed the river in one long stride and that he dipped his hand in the bottom of the ocean to catch fish which he lifted to the sun to roast!

But all this is about to change. The Saudi national income last year was the highest in the history of the kingdom due to high oil prices. Public spending for public projects rocketed. This leads to unprecedented economic boom. This had a tremendous impact on the private sector and business in general. However, when the entrepreneurs and business executives turned to the local market for labor, they woke up to the dismal fact that there was a dire lack of qualified Saudis with the proper training needed to handle technical, managerial and administrative jobs. It was at this point that local voices were raised in clamor demanding educational reform and warning of a very bleak future for the kingdom if no drastic measures are taken to remedy the situation. Three or four years ago we used to hear that all this talk about curriculum reform was a capitulation to American pressure. In 2001 complaints against Saudi public education were actually coming mainly from the outside claiming that it was run and dominated by fundamentalists who were turning Saudi public schools into a breeding ground for terrorists. But when terrorists turned their terror against the Saudi society itself and when it was suddenly realized that poor education would foil any hope of implementing serious plans for soci-economic development, demands for educational reform were heard from every corner of Saudi society. It became a burning issue and a beaten track trodden daily by editorialists and columnists in the local newspapers.

The Saudi government is on its way to launch the biggest and most drastic overhaul of its educational system. Last month, the government announced that it has earmarked 3.3 billion dollars to be spent on improving the quality of the Saudi educational system. Of this sum, about 3.5 million dollars will be spent on building new universities and colleges in nine cities throughout the kingdom to make higher education available to young Saudis everywhere in the kingdom. The Minister of higher education announced a new drive to invest in human resources pointing out that investment in human minds is the first and most crucial step towards building and developing Saudi society.

But the greater sum of money will go towards improving public education in elementary and secondary schools. For many years public schools consisted mainly of rented building not equipped or suited for the purpose. Above that, the emphasis in the curricula was on religious studies which does not qualify students neither for higher education nor for the job market. Public school teachers are poorly qualified and most of them are indoctrinated in a strict and narrowly defined interpretation of the Wahhabi dogma. To change all this, the government will spend over one billion dollars to improve the educational environment. This means building new schools fully equipped with up to date laboratories and classrooms with computers and other advanced teaching aids. The emphasis will be on information and communication technology ICT in order to make education more self fulfilling and the educational environment more conducive to creative learning and the development of individual skills and talents. In addition, more than one billion dollars will be spent on extra curriculum activity to help the students to improve their individual hobbies and develop them into constructive and productive pursuits. About 800 million dollars will be spent on the upgrading and rehabilitation of teachers. Over 200 million dollars are to be spent on developing school curricula.

To draw this educational development plan, which is now under preparation and supposed to be implemented during the coming five years, a committee was formed of high profile technocrats, including ministers of education, labor, finance, and economics and planning. Another subcommittee of specialists toured several countries to benefit from their experiences in the educational field. Countries visited included USA, Britain, Ireland, Austria, Switzerland, Canada, France, New Zealand, Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, China and Japan. I do not agree with the senecs who characterize the tour of the committee as a free ride, a God sent opportunity to take a free first class tour around the world. I think the choice of these countries is rather significant. It shows a new mood and a new willingness to open up towards the West and benefit from Western experience. This is a relaxation of the ideology of al-khusousiyya which has been the dominant thinking in Saudi Arabia. Al-khusousiyya means uniqueness and distinctiveness and it verges on phobia and hostility to other cultures and other people. It closes the door against searching for any meeting grounds or commonalities with others, as if we wanted to insulate ourselves and be happy and proud with our khusousiyyah and will not interact or deal with the outside world except on our own terms and conditions.

This much money, much work and much attention being paid to educational reform is an unmistakable signal that the Saudi government has finally realized and admitted that its educational system has failed and that it needs to be reinvented. Population explosion and demographic shifts are ticking bombs that will explode in everybody’s face if not addressed through educational reforms. These planned reforms are the silver lining surrounding the cloud of terrorist attacks or, as the Arab saying goes: a good thing might come out of a harmful happening. This educational reform program is launched under the auspices of King Abdulah himself. This is a clear signal that the King refuses to continue to be a hostage to the religious establishment and their dicta. The new educational policy means that the traditional religious subjects will have to be drastically curtailed and watered down to make room for new subjects in science and mathematics. Gradually, the scientific conceptions and natural explanations of the universe will take the place of religious ones.

Another new and important development of real significance in the field of higher education happened last week when the university council of King Saud University announced that for the first time in its history the university will accept private donations from individuals and business establishments for the setting up of academic chairs and research grants in various subjects, with emphasis on medicine and science. The importance of this move lies not only in the bringing of extra funds to the university budgets, which are expected to be substantial, but, of no less importance, it will loosen the grip of official and direct government interference into and control over higher education. In the past, even when the Saudi economy was at its lowest ebb, as in the aftermath of the Gulf War in 1991, the Saudi government adamantly refused to allow the private sector to make contributions towards financing higher education. The perception was that such contributions would undermine the grip of the government on both public and higher education, which are used, more or less, mainly as instruments of political and religious indoctrination. Scientific facts that run counter to this purpose are suppressed or denied altogether. Logic, philosophy, evolution and similar subjects are taboo. Until recently, master and Ph. D. dissertations in some departments, like sociology and political science, must be approved by the ministry of interior. It is unlikely that such practices, which comprise educational quality, will be tolerated by private donors.

The steps taken by the Saudi government to upgrade the quality of education are commendable indeed. If the strategy is implemented according to plan, I am sure we will notice the difference in five years time. Yet, it should be pointed out that fancy buildings, expensive equipments, and teaching aids are just that, teaching aids. This is all very essential, of course. But even more important is the fostering of tolerance, free speech and freedom of thought. True quality education can thrive and flourish only in an atmosphere of freedom and liberty.

 







  

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