http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=5&article_id=107578#



Copyright (c) 2009 The Daily Star
 
Friday, October 16, 2009


Arab education is very elementary
By Raja Kamal 
Commentary by 


Many of the Arab countries have been blessed with vast reserves of oil and 
natural gas that became the dominant engines of the economic change over the 
past century. That, of course, is the good news. The bad news is that oil and 
natural gas still constitute the commercial foundation of much of the Arab 
world. All attempts to achieve economic diversity have failed.

If oil and natural gas were excluded from the various economies of what we 
define as the Arab world, with its 350 million inhabitants, their cumulative 
gross domestic product would amount to less than that of Finland, a country 
with a population of little over 5 million. With the exception of a few 
isolated pockets, the Middle East has failed miserably at catching up with the 
economic growth seen in most other corners of the world. If it is to turn this 
around, reforming the educational system-including colleges and 
universities-should be one of the starting points.
Higher education in the Arab world is witnessing fast growth. The recent bold 
Arab academic expansion reflects a serious attempt by rulers and policymakers 
to enable their citizenry to catch up with the rest of the world. It is 
believed that the construction of new colleges and universities would speed up 
the developmental progress and change. 

About 100 new colleges have been founded in the Arab world since the early 
1990s. Qatar and the United Arab Emirates have established over 40 universities 
alone during the same period. Mostly are private and the bulk are branches of 
or associated with American universities.

Arab universities have consistently produced graduates who have difficulty 
finding a place in the increasingly global economy. The last decade has seen an 
attempt to increase drastically the number of colleges in the Arab world. The 
latest has been the inauguration of the King Abdullah University of Science and 
Technology (KAUST). This $12.5 billion institution is being viewed as the 
catalyst that will start a great educational reversal.

Yet, this massive investment - which will make KAUST, on day one, among the 
richest 10 universities in the world - is a drop in the bucket. Even if 
successful, KAUST will serve few lucky students while the majority of the Saudi 
and Arab youths will still be victims of a system that teaches students what to 
think instead of how to think.

Will this massive investment expenditure in higher education pay off? Or, is it 
just a quick fix to a much deeper and serious problem?

In reality, the poor educational system in the Arab world is rooted in poor 
elementary education systems that are entrenched in religious studies and weak 
in math, science, and foreign languages. Several international tests reflect 
the poor performance of Arab students: they consistently score among the worst 
globally. With poorly trained and underpaid teachers most of whom do not 
encourage critical thinking, these poor results are not surprising.

Although no one will doubt the commitment of Arab leaders to promote and 
advance education in the Arab world, change must take place at the ministries 
of education in Riyadh and elsewhere in Arab capitals. Reforming the elementary 
educational system to strengthen instruction in essential subjects will allow 
students to succeed and to be prepared for higher education. This is the reform 
that will train teachers to inspire and motivate students to think instead of 
the current system that advocates memorization.

Each additional hour of religion taught in Arab public schools is one less hour 
taught in math and science - an hour badly needed to prepare students to be 
globally competitive. Religion must be diluted in the curriculum and taught 
after school or on the weekend. Studying religion should not compromise the 
essential education required to succeed in school and beyond. Tackling the 
problem should start with the drastic revamping of the early childhood 
education. This will require bold leadership currently nowhere to be found.

As for higher education, very few successful models exist now in the Arab 
world. The American University of Beirut (AUB) continues to be a unique 
exception to the norm. It has proven to be resilient and progressive since it's 
founding in 1866, weathering domestic and regional challenges. Yet, it never 
steered away from its core mission of preparing students to succeed globally by 
embracing critical thinking. AUB had the advantage of having a predominantly 
secular educational system to recruit students from.

Arab leaders should look to AUB as a model. No need to reinvent the wheel.


Raja Kamal is senior associate dean at the Harris School for Public Policy 
Studies at the University of Chicago. He wrote this commentary for THE DAILY 
STAR.

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