SAUDI STUDENTS FACE A CHANGING SYSTEM
Reformers are hoping to remove inflexible - and
sometimes anti-Western - aspects of the Saudi educational system. A
flagging economy makes the task urgent.
By Faye Bowers, Staff Writer of The Christian Science Monitor
Third of four parts
RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA - Amal
is a twentysomething fourth-year medical student whose parents taught her to
dream big. She does: Amal wants to be Saudi Arabia's first famous female
plastic surgeon.
Mansour al-Nogaidan is a thirtysomething
writer who grew up with a different dream - he wanted to become a devout
Muslim and rid the region, if not the world, of infidels. Mr. Nogaidan did
live his dream - for a time. He became a jihadist, and attempted to purge his
country of "infidels."
That both these dreams were nurtured by the
same educational system underscores the challenges facing reformers in Saudi
Arabia. That Amal can pursue her educational goals is remarkable, considering
the country opened schools for girls only in 1960. But whether she will have
been prepared for a real job is another thing.
Nogaidan has amended his ways, but says that
the seeds of his extremism were planted during his early education. The
government is working on a number of reforms but as with all other reforms
necessary in this country, it's a difficult balancing act between hard-line
religious conservatives and more liberal-minded citizens.
"We need to have a rehabilitation
program," says Khaled al-Maeena, editor in chief of Arab News, the
largest English language newspaper in Saudi Arabia. "We need to teach our
children tolerance and dialogue .. Parents would rather see their children
carry a PC than a hand grenade or an AK-47."
A fight to reform the
system
The government last year began to remove
objectionable language in textbooks. According to several educators and
students alike, this year school texts were cleansed of objectionable
references to Jews, Christians, and Hindus, and the inappropriate use of the
word "jihad." A government council made up of several educators and
other professionals is reexamining both textbooks and teaching habits.
But,
"the No. 1 problem is that the religious community is so tough in
opposing reforms," says a Western diplomat based in Riyadh. "The No.
2 problem is they argue, 'Why should we make reforms? Because Americans ask us
to?' "
Indeed, one muttawa (member of the
religious police) puts a harder edge on the point. "Do you have
committees in America purging your books of objectionable words about
Muslims?" asks Sheikh Mussa al-Hanagid.
Nogaidan says that attitudes like this are
what make the system so difficult to change. "It's impossible to wait for
these sheikhs to change the education system, because they are the ones
controlling [it], says Nogaidan. "It's the problem the authorities
face."
But reform is goes beyond hateful words and
intolerant phrases. Many here say the education system needs top-to-bottom
fixes to not only root out the ideology that leads to terrorism, but to keep
up with a developing society and globalization.
Lifestyles, for instance, have drastically
changed here. In 1981, per capita income was $28,000. Today, it is about
$8,000, according to government figures. Although the oil boom economy of the
1970s and '80s that supported millions of foreign workers doesn't exist today,
the number of foreign workers has swelled to some 7 million, and they fill 7
out of 10 jobs here, working mostly in the service sector, and earning far
less than Saudis. More Saudi students than ever (and more women than men) are
graduating from universities but can't find jobs.
Moreover, many Saudi observers say the early
public education system, which is strong in sciences and math - especially for
boys - doesn't teach critical thinking skills. Nor do Saudi lifestyles
encourage the kind of initiative necessary to compete in the business world.
"Since 1999, Saudi Arabia started
realizing that more young people coming into the market cannot meet the market
needs," says Abdulrahman al-Zamil, a businessman who serves on the
finance committee of the king's Majlis Ash Shura (consultative counsel).
"They are specializing in language or religion.... It's a problem for the
private sector."
The government is working to alleviate the
pressures. It has had some on-and-off successes with a Saudization program -
replacing some foreign workers, such as shopkeepers in the souks, with Saudi
citizens. In addition, the Ministry of Education embarked on a major study for
revamping the system eight years ago, and presented its findings to the Majlis
in October 2001.
"The summary of the report was 150
pages," says Abdulmuhsin al-Akkas, a member of the Majlis. "The
entire report was about 800 pages. And the reform included every aspect -
curriculum, not just religious subjects ... English, math, and science. It
included recommendations on the structure of the schools, about the ratio of
students to teachers, continuing education of teachers, and so on."
Boosting the budget
Those reforms have been debated by the Majlis
and sent back to the Ministry of Education for implementation of the
recommendations - so far not released to the public.
The government has, however, announced plans
to enhance several aspects of the education system in the new 2004 budget. It
allocates $16.97 billion for general education, higher education, and manpower
training for 2004, up by $5.6 billion from last year's budget.
The additional money will fund three new
universities, bringing the total number of universities in the kingdom to 11.
A number of colleges and vocational training centers are planned, as well as
3,030 new schools for boys and girls. Now, some 70 percent of boys' and girls'
schools are housed in dilapidated, rented buildings.
For Amal, uncertain
prospects
Amal, for her part, says she may go abroad for
more advanced study after she completes the two additional years of her
seven-year medical studies program in Saudi Arabia.
Although the medical field is open to women
here, she doesn't know if she will have a job when she returns.
Amal's younger sister, Scheda, is a first-year
university student who hasn't yet declared a major. She had wanted to be an
engineer, but that field of study is not open to women in Saudi Arabia.
"Young people have nothing to do,"
she complains. "They feel empty - there are no jobs when they finish
college."
The Western diplomat says in other societies,
it is the young people, like Scheda and Amal, who normally challenge old
ideas. "Here in the kingdom," he says, "young people are quiet.
A big part of it is education, but it is also societal. That you do not
challenge your father."
The practice of questioning and critical
thinking is missing from the early education system here, says an American
woman who married a Saudi and became a Saudi citizen. She raised four children
in the Riyadh area - all of them attended school here until the ninth grade.
"The schools here offer a lot of rote
memorization from the time [students] are young," says the woman who
requested anonymity, all but her face covered in the traditional black.
"Kids aren't encouraged to ask questions in school.... Kids aren't taught
logical and critical thinking."
Part of that, she asserts, is because there is
no public speaking - classes in which children prepare and present talks or
speeches. And there is no arts education - no music or art - "the things
that make you a whole person."
Moreover, she says, young Saudis'
unpreparedness to compete in the job market with the millions of foreign
workers has a lot to do with the way children are brought up.
"Every family, even if they're poor, has
a maid," she says. "Kids don't do chores.... There are no bake sales
in school, no car washes, no paper routes after school, nothing to teach them
personal accomplishment - not even summer jobs."
"Education reforms need to start from the
king," says A. A. Alabdul Hai, a political science professor who
specializes in women's issues at King Saud University in Riyadh. "It
should be changed completely.... It will take time. The education process
takes 10 to 20 years to change. It's not like boiling an egg."
[Reprinted with permission of the Christian
Science Monitor]
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IN
THE SERIES: SAUDI ARABIA -- ON A DAGGER'S EDGE |
Part One: How an Al Qaeda Hotbed
Turned Inhospitable [Click
Here]
Part Two: For Saudis, A Hard Fight Over Faith [Click
Here]