Refleksi : Menurut keterangan dalam suatu interview di TV Aljazeera dikatakan 
bahwa mutu pendidikan di Arab Saudia adalah yang terendah  Timur Tengah.

http://www.dawn.com/2011/02/10/special-report-in-saudia-arabia-a-clamour-for-education.html


: Special report: In Saudi Arabia, a clamour for education
Reuters
Yesterday

 
A secondary school student holds his head as he sits for an exam at the Abu 
Baker Al Arabi government school in Riyadh. - Photo by Reuters

."
Mubarak says to transfer power but not resigningProsecutors to seek Davis trial 
todayPresident, PM meets to discuss round-table conferenceJEDDAH: Saudi 
teenager Abdulrahman Saeed lives in one of the richest countries in the world, 
but his prospects are poor, he blames his education, and it's not a situation 
that looks like changing soon.

"There is not enough in our curriculum," says Saeed, 16, who goes to an 
all-male state school in the Red Sea port of Jeddah.

"It is just theoretical teaching, and there is no practice or guidance to 
prepare us for the job market."

Saeed wants to study physics but worries that his state high school is failing 
him. He says the curriculum is outdated, and teachers simply repeat what is 
written in text books without adding anything of practical value or 
discussions. Even if the teachers did do more than the basics, Saeed's class, 
at 32 students, is too big for him to get adequate attention.

While children in Europe and Asia often start learning a language at five or 
six, Saudi students start learning English at 12. Much time is spent studying 
religion and completing exercises heavy with moral instruction. One task for 
eighth grade students:

"Discuss the problem of staying up late, its causes, effects and cure."

In the face of rising unemployment, Saeed has taken parts of his education into 
his own hands. He learned how to use the internet on his own and sets himself 
research projects in his own time to try to make up for his school's 
shortcomings.

"The subjects available are not enough to carry us to the career or 
specialisation that is needed for the job," he complains.

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia sits on more than a fifth of the globe's oil 
reserves and thanks to high oil prices it has almost tripled its foreign assets 
to more than $400 billion since 2005.

The region's thinkers had a profound influence on the evolving western science 
of the Middle Ages. But from kindergarten to university, its state education 
system has barely entered the modern age. Focused on religious and Arabic 
studies, it has long struggled to produce the scientists, engineers, economists 
and lawyers that Saudi needs.

High school literature, history and even science text books regularly quote 
Quranic verses. Employers complain that universities churn out graduates who 
are barely computer-literate and struggle with English. So frustrated are some 
students, they have taken to the streets in protest.

"Education in our country cannot be compared to education abroad," says Dina 
Faisal, mother of a 15-year old student in Jeddah. "We have a lack of sciences, 
physics, and biology. That is what is needed to push the country forward. There 
has been some change but it is far from being complete."

Six years ago, alarmed by how many young Saudis were out of work, King Abdullah 
bin Abdul-Aziz launched an overhaul of state schools and universities. The 
effort is part of a raft of reforms designed to ease the influence of religious 
clerics, build a modern state and diversify the economy away from oil to create 
more jobs.

The reforms are controversial, though, and nowhere more so than in education. 
Adding more science classes means scaling back on religion - a direct challenge 
to the Wahhabi clerics who helped found the kingdom in 1932 and dominate vast 
parts of society.

"The Saudi education system is particularly difficult to reform because it is 
traditionally one of the main areas where the clerics have influence," says 
Jane Kinninmont at the Economist Intelligence Unit. "Asserting technocratic 
control over education may require a power struggle with the conservative 
clerics."

Many reform-minded Saudis were optimistic when Abdullah first announced the 
changes. Since then, though, the pace of reform has been slow. In the past few 
months the chance that Saudi's rulers will really take on the clerics has 
faded. King Abdullah, who is around 87, is recuperating in Morocco after two 
months of medical treatment in the United States.

The slightly younger Crown Prince Sultan bin Abdul-Aziz has spent most of the 
past two years in Morocco and the United States because of an unspecified 
illness. Many Saudi observers believe Prince Nayef bin Abdul-Aziz, the veteran 
interior minister who has close ties to clerics and appears lukewarm on reform, 
has a good chance of taking over after his promotion to second deputy prime 
minister in 2009.

"Reform?" asks Simon Henderson, a Washington-based author of several studies on 
Saudi succession. "It has been moribund.since Nayef became second deputy prime 
minister. Abdullah has also lost energy for it."

The spark for change 

Abdullah launched his $2.4 billion "Tatweer" initiative - Tatweer is Arabic for 
development - in 2005, promising to overhaul teaching methods, emphasise 
science and train 500,000 teachers. The king has repeatedly said that giving 
young people a better education is at the heart of his plan to build a modern 
state and fight religious extremism.

"Humanity has been the target of vicious attacks from extremists, who speak the 
language of hatred, fear dialogue, and pursue destruction," King Abdullah said 
in 2009 at the inauguration of the country's first mixed-gender university, a 
high-tech campus near Jeddah with an estimated budget of $10 billion. "We 
cannot fight them unless we learn to coexist without conflict. Undoubtedly, 
scientific centres that embrace all peoples are the first line of defence 
against extremists."

Since then, the number of state and private universities catering to the 
300,000 or so high school students who graduate every year has grown to 32 from 
eight before 2005, the ministry of higher education says. A large female-only 
university is under construction near Riyadh airport. Until the new 
universities take root, the government has given scholarships to 109,000 
students to study in top universities mainly in the United States, Europe and 
the Middle East.

Schools too are changing. Within two years, all primary and high schools will 
get new mathematics and science textbooks that follow US standards, the 
government says. Thousands of teachers are undergoing extra training. Primary 
schools will still focus largely on teaching Arabic and religion, but high 
schools will have more science and mathematics classes.

"We don't say we have no problems but it is getting better. It's changing," 
says Nayef al-Roomi, deputy minister in charge of developing education, as he 
shows charts of curriculum changes in his office and tries to ignore the 
constant ring of his mobile and desk phones.

"Education is not a factory. We will see at least three years to get results."

Slow and uncertain

So far, though, progress has been barely visible. A 2007 study by the respected 
Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) put Saudi 
students third-last in eighth grade mathematics. In the science category, the 
kingdom was fifth-last. Saudi Arabia also ranked 93rd of 129 in UNESCO's 2008 
index assessing quality of education. Analysts say there has been no noticeable 
improvement in the kingdom's education standards in the past four years.

"I think 10 years is a realistic option to see a real change if all plans are 
implemented," says a consultant who has worked for the education ministry and 
spoke on condition of anonymity because of the risks of challenging the 
official view.

A 2008 study by Booz & Company said progress had been made in Saudi Arabia and 
other Gulf Arab countries, agreeing that noticeable results can be obtained in 
a decade, even though "realisation of the full economic impact may require a 
generational period."

Even then, the changes will only go some way to overhauling the system. Take 
school textbooks. The government has started to cut comments that urged Saudis 
to kill "infidel" Christians and Jews. But the books still say Saudis should 
avoid non-Muslims. A reference in a new religious textbook seen by Reuters says 
that "Prophet (Mohammed) has cursed Jews and Christians because they have built 
places of worship around their prophets' tombs."

"In the past the textbooks used to refer to the infidels saying that they must 
be killed. Now it still refers to the infidels but says that we must not use 
violence in dealing with them," says Dina.

Changing that will require "a mentality change," says the consultant. "It's not 
just introducing new textbooks."

But clerics and conservatives dominate the education ministry, diplomats and 
education experts say. Conservative officials in mid-level positions sometimes 
delay or ignore directives from above. Textbooks and teaching methods appear 
not to change much.

"We cannot really say that any comprehensive education reform programme is 
underway," says the EIU's Kinninmont.

A question of jobs

The push to fix education is rooted in a fear that millions of young, 
unemployed Saudis - 70 per cent of the country's almost 19 million population 
is under the age of 30 - is a recipe for radicalism. Fifteen of the 19 
terrorists who attacked the United States on 9/11 were Saudis, while an al 
Qaeda bombing campaign inside the kingdom between 2003 and 2006 ended only 
after a massive government operation. Last year, 172 Saudis with al Qaeda links 
were arrested, proving Islamist groups are still actively recruiting in the 
kingdom.

The economy is ticking over nicely, and the US ally has just unveiled its third 
consecutive record fiscal budget. The problem is, companies much prefer to hire 
expatriates instead of locals, in large part because of shoddy education. The 
number of expats working in Saudi Arabia has risen by 37 per cent to 8.4 
million in the past six years. Expats now fill nine out of 10 jobs in the 
private sector, according to John Sfakianakis, chief economist of Banque Saudi 
Fransi.

Labour Minister Adil Fakieh said on January 25 the government hopes to create 
five million jobs for Saudis by 2030 but economists think that's unlikely. 
Unemployment among Saudis has risen. Officially, the rate was 10 per cent in 
2010; the rate of female unemployment is probably triple that.

The state has introduced quotas on the percentage of local workers private 
firms must hire. But companies have become expert at circumventing the laws, by 
hiring lots of locals for low-level jobs, or breaking up firms into smaller 
entities "just to have smaller quotas," says a banker in Riyadh.

In the past, many Saudis found work with the government. But the kingdom has 
one of the region's highest population growth rates so citizens no longer 
automatically get such jobs. In stark contrast to a generation ago, you can 
find Saudis working as taxi drivers, supermarket cashiers or private security 
guards, jobs which net as little as 1,500 riyals ($400) a month. "I was 
surprised to see Saudis work in supermarkets. That would have been impossible 
10 years ago," says a Western diplomat on his second posting to Saudi Arabia.

Nael Fayez, head of Injaz, a non-governmental organisation that helps prepare 
students for the job market, believes education is the main problem. "There is 
a rising gap between the requirements of the private sector and what state 
school produces," says. "We need to fill the gap."

Option B

That gap is at least partially filled by a scheme to educate Saudi Arabia's 
brightest at foreign universities overseas. Officials who back the king hope 
the students will return with new ideas and a desire to shake things up. The 
problem: many prefer life abroad.

"There are more things to do day-to-day: going to parks, cinemas, theatre shows 
or restaurants with your friends or girlfriend," says Osama Zeid, a 23-year old 
Saudi studying in Boston. In Saudi, a teenager's spare time is filled watching 
television or going to a mall, where the religious police make sure no 
unrelated men and women meet at restaurants or cafes.

"People are friendlier and everyone is socially accepted and more open-minded. 
In Saudi there is no entertainment. You need entertainment," says another Saudi 
attending the same university after graduating from high school in the US.

There is no data on how many Saudi students plan to stay overseas, but bankers 
in Riyadh say some of the best talent studying in the United States regularly 
ends up on Wall Street rather than heading home. "Expectation-management is a 
big issue. Young people growing up with the internet won't be happy to sit at 
home even if the state guarantees a basic income," says a diplomat in Riyadh. 
"They want to do something."

Saudi officials are also pinning their hopes on private schools and colleges at 
home which have sprung up in major cities in the past five years. A new 
technical college in a residential area of eastern Riyadh is one example. From 
the outside, the school looks like a typical state university - high walls 
shielding white brick buildings clustered around a large mosque. Inside, the 
differences are radical. Germany's state aid agency GTZ, which gets paid for 
the project by the Saudi government, has installed laptops, Power Point 
presentation facilities, and electronic workstations. The aim of the 45 
teachers who run the school is to turn out Saudi vocational teachers who can 
then transform how things work at more than 100 technical colleges around the 
country.

The students have already graduated from state technical high schools but feel 
they have entered a new world. "It's totally different and better compared to 
the previous institute, the methods to try out things, the materials," says 
Mohammed al-Mansour, who came from Najran near the Yemeni border to study here.

Applications are piling up. Of some 2,000 requests the college has admitted 450 
students so far but plans to expand to 2,000 by 2012.

"It's just excellent, much better than had I expected," said 24-year old Ahmad 
Hamdashi from Riyadh, talking while his friends work on measuring power current 
on work stations at their desks.

The students' biggest surprise, perhaps, is to find that a teacher doesn't just 
have to read from a book. "Let's do it again," says teacher Bernhard Homann, 
insisting everyone in the class tests the currents properly.

"We want them to work out things on their own," says Raimund Sobetzko, vice 
dean at the school.

Too many wrong graduates 

Nayef al-Tamimi wishes he could have gone to such a college. Like thousands of 
other Saudis, al-Tamimi graduated from university as an Arabic language teacher 
but has struggled for years to get a job that pays a decent wage. At private 
schools, he makes about 2,000 riyals a month - much less than the 8,000 he 
would get as a government teacher. "At private schools I compete with 
foreigners. Egyptians, Jordanians, Palestinians. It's tough," he says.

This year he joined some 250 fellow graduates to organise a series of protests 
in front of the ministry of education in Riyadh, a bold move in a country that 
does not tolerate public dissent. Even though police quickly show up whenever 
the group gathers, Tamimi said the protests will continue until they all get 
the state jobs they so desperately seek. The government may eventually decide 
to hire the protesters just to end the demonstrations that have started to make 
global headlines.

But critics of the reforms, including political opponents, say the problems 
will remain until the ruling al Saud family allows more freedom and independent 
thinking - the sort of progress that will depend on the future king.

Saudi Arabia has no elected parliament, but King Abdullah has forced Saudi 
society to open up ever so slightly. Saudi newspapers now debate reforms, women 
enjoy slightly more access to education and the job market. Would a more 
conservative king reverse those?

"How can you reform education without democracy?" asks Mohammed al-Qahtani, a 
veteran dissident based in Riyadh. "I tell you that in five years there will be 
no improvement to education


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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