Education trends in MENA: Q&A

ɫèAV Languages
Children running through a school hall smiling
Today we're discussing Education trends with Isil Berkan, the Marketing Director for the Middle East, Africa & Turkey:

Can you share how your school solutions are implementing AI and other technologies? Are schools interested in these solutions? Have any been implemented? Can you provide case studies from the MENA region?

We have several solutions that are technology influenced that have been deployed across the Middle East, in the UAE, KSA, Oman, Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Kuwait, Qatar and Jordan.

  • MondlyWorks by ɫèAV - This immersive language learning app makes language learning engaging and accessible for schools and university learners through interactive lessons, games, and activities tailored to their age group. The app is an example of gamified learning to keep students motivated and interested while they acquire new language skills.
  • ɫèAV English Connect (PEC) - a game-changing digital teachers' hub revolutionizing English language teaching inside and outside the classroom. PEC is a fully interactive digital experience that provides highly effective online teaching and easy monitoring of progress and performance for students and teachers alike.
  • ɫèAV Test of English (PTE) - An internationally recognized computer-based English language proficiency test for study, work, or visas. The ɫèAV Test of English employs an AI-based scoring system, ensuring 100% impartiality so only the candidate's responses influence the scores. More than 3000 academic institutions, professional organizations and government bodies trust PTE to verify English skills in Canada, the UK, Australia, the USA, and New Zealand.

Expatriates make up more than 40% of the current Middle East population; hence studying abroad is relatively common in this part of the world. The UAE invests significant resources towards overseas education for its students, as evident from widely reported annual numbers of approximately 15,000 individuals studying abroad.

In KSA, the King Abdullah Scholarship Program (KASP), established by the Saudi Arabian government in 2005, is a pivotal component of the ambitious Saudi Vision 2030 initiative. This national vision seeks to transform Saudi Arabia into a diverse and knowledge-driven economy while fostering social and cultural transformation. By investing in the education of Saudi students across various fields and levels, KASP equips them with the necessary skills and expertise and cultivates a global perspective. As these scholars return home after their studies, they are poised to contribute significantly to the nation's economic diversification, technological advancement, and international collaboration, thereby driving forward the comprehensive aspirations of Saudi Vision 2030.

Moreover, in the MEA region, the sector is projected to be worth $7 billion by 2027, demonstrating the growing significance of technology in education.

How do you see current trends - such as present jobs being replaced with others, many as-yet-unknown - influencing curricula across the Middle East? How should schools and universities incorporate skills-based learning to ensure students can fluidly adapt to tomorrow's challenges?

English proficiency also plays a crucial role in a globalized world, bridging individuals from diverse cultures and facilitating seamless information-sharing worldwide. English is the lingua franca for communication. Today, most English speakers have learned English as a second or additional language - learned through study and testing later in life. This is where English proficiency testing products like ɫèAV's are most useful and can be incorporated into schools and universities.

ɫèAV surveyed 4,000 employees across the globe for our Skills Outlook 2023, which revealed that people are most interested in careers in tech and business-related fields such as e-commerce, software services, data science, and financial services. However, they believe human skills – like problem-solving, leadership, and teamwork – are the most attractive to employers now and in the future. Additionally, a recent ɫèAV on ICT certification shows that 59% of employers in the Middle East have increased their investment in IT skills training within the past 12 months.

This is where the MENA region emphasizes STEM and tech-related fields from the elementary level. For instance, one of the key initiatives of the Ministry of Saudi is to build a world-class education system using STEM and transform Saudi into a knowledge-based economy. Another is the UAE Government Development and the Future Office's "building future talents" initiative to build 10,000 UAE public school female students' skills in STEM fields. The region is upskilling its residents and citizens by incorporating EdTech and gamified learning to keep students engaged in associated subjects.

Anything you'd like to add about education trends in the MENA region?

The focus in the MENA region will be on upscaling its E-Learning and Online Education to promote a 'learn-on-the-go' environment. Within this language learning and bilingual education are a focus to allow students to pursue international opportunities and Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) education is a focus to equip students with the skills for the modern workforce.

More blogs from ɫèAV

  • Students sat together in a classroom working together

    Exploring the four Cs: Using future skills to unlock young learners’ potential

    By Annie Altamirano
    Reading time: 5 minutes

    What do we mean by future skills?

    The skills students will need in their future studies and careers are dramatically different from those required previously. Times are changing rapidly and educational institutions and teachers have a critical role to play in developing those skills in our young learners so that they are able to fulfill their potential and have bright futures ahead of them.

    These skills are referred to as future skills. There is no common consensus on how to define these skills but, broadly speaking, they can be grouped into four categories:

    1. Ways of thinking

    Skills in this category include critical thinking, creativity, innovation, problem solving, metacognition and learning skills.

    2. Ways of working

    Here, we’re talking about the skills of communication and collaboration.

    3. Tools for working

    Information literacy is an important 21st-century skill, as well as ICT literacy and citizenship, both global and local.

    4. Life skills

    The final category covers life and career skills, and is all about personal and social responsibility.

    One way you can encourage young learners to build these skills is through STEAM subjects (that’s science, technology, engineering, arts and math), which will equip them with functional skills such as organizing, planning, cognitive flexibility and self-regulation.

    The four Cs

    The four Cs refer to four important skills for young learners to master: communication, collaboration, critical thinking and creativity. These are essential, not just in an educational context, but in everyday life.

    Falling into the first two categories of future skills (ways of thinking and ways of working), these can help children build confidence and self-esteem. They also encourage healthy emotional development.

    So let’s take a closer look at the theory behind them.

    1. Communication

    We usually think of communication as speaking and listening, but it’s actually much broader than that. Communication encapsulates telling stories, reading, sharing ideas and experiences, body language, facial expression, eye contact and tone. Children learn to decipher the world around them by learning and practicing these skills.

    Strong communication skills, developed early, are directly related to their literacy success. These skills allow children to articulate their thoughts and ideas effectively, and listen to decode meaning. Students then begin to use communication for a range of purposes, and communicate effectively in diverse environments. Furthermore, developing strong patterns of verbal and non-verbal communication also fosters self-esteem and social skills.

    2. Collaboration

    Collaboration is how young children begin to build friendships with others. At first, young children will watch what others do and say, before moving on to playing together. As they get older, they become aware of other children’s feelings and ideas. Friendships become motivating and they learn how to make compromises and respect each other’s perspectives and skills.

    Collaboration is enhanced through group work and project-based activities, sharing time with peers. Children thrive when they feel valued by the people around them, not just adults but their peers too.

  • Business people stood together around a laptop in a office

    Learning English and employability

    By Tas Viglatzis
    Reading time: 4 minutes

    English not only opens up career opportunities beyond national borders; it is a key requirement for many jobs. It’s also no longer a case of just learning English for employability, but mastering English for business – and that means an on-going commitment to learn.

    My experience is consistent with this trend. If I had to estimate the value that being fluent in English has had on my career, I'd say it was my entire life’s earnings. Learning English has offered me educational options beyond the borders of my own country and enabled me to develop the skills to work for global companies that operate across national boundaries. I have been privileged to work in different countries in roles that have spanned functions, geographies and markets – and my ability to learn and evolve my English skills has been an underlying factor throughout.

  • A teacher showing her students a globe, with her students looking at the globe, one with a magnifying glass in hand.

    What’s it like to teach English in Turkey?

    By Steffanie Zazulak
    Reading time: 3 minutes

    Alice Pilkington qualified as a CELTA (Certificate in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) certified teacher in October 2009. She started working in Rome before moving to Istanbul, where she’s spent the past three and a half years teaching English to “everyone from 8-year-olds to company executives; students to bored housewives”. Having taught in two very different countries to a diverse range of English learners, Alice shares with us the five lessons she’s learned:

    1. Don't take things personally when you're teaching English

    "I am probably not emotionally suited for this job. I take everything very personally and if a lesson goes wrong or an activity I have taken time and energy to plan doesn’t work, I feel like a complete failure. It’s a trial and error experience but when things go wrong, they can go very wrong, and it really makes you doubt your abilities as a teacher.

    Having said that, the lessons that do go well can make up for these negative feelings. I shouldn’t take things personally; the majority of my colleagues don’t and it saves them a lot of sleepless nights"

    2. Teaching English is incredibly rewarding

    "There are very few feelings that I’ve experienced that compare to seeing a student use a word that you have taught them – it makes you feel like a proud parent. Equally, seeing a student improve over a series of months is so joyful.I have been teaching English university preparation students for the past year.

    In September, they could barely say what their name was and what they did over the weekend. Nine months on and they’re capable of reading academic texts and speaking at length about marketing strategies and environmental problems. It’s a wonderful thing to observe"

    3. Teach more than just English

    "Turkish students love hearing about how you appreciate their food and cultural traditions. Equally, they are genuinely interested in understanding how things operate in the UK and enjoy hearing personal anecdotes.I tend to be very open with my students – even about my personal life.I think it is partly because I have striven from the very beginning of my career to be seen as their equal.

    Turkish students are used to having a huge respect for teachers, and there is a hierarchical system in schools here, which I can never go along with. In my first lesson with most students, I tell them that they must call me by my first name (usually you refer to teachers here as ‘hocam’ which means ‘my teacher’ and shows respect) and this can take a long while for them to get used to."

    4. Failure to prepare is to prepare for failure... or is it?

    "Lessons that you spend hours preparing for generally don’t go as well as you had hoped. There were several times when I’d spend hours cutting and sticking things on pieces of card and placing pictures all over the classroom, hoping it would get some vocabulary action going, only to start the class and receive no response from the students.

    Conversely, lessons where you don’t feel very motivated or have no idea what you are going to do until you get into the classroom (which I call the ‘flying by the seat of your pants’ lessons) can turn out to be the best ones. I once had a lesson in which I was, admittedly, rather hungover. On the way to the lesson, I grabbed a book called ‘Taboos and Issues’, full of discussion topics, which I used as a basis for a rather impromptu lesson on addictions, which was very successful indeed."

    5. Teaching English isn't easy

    "Teaching English is a love/hate profession. There are weeks when you absolutely loathe it and want to quit, but then within the space of a lesson or two, you get inspired by something completely unexpected, rediscover your joy for it and love it again."