October 29, 2009
Saudi Arabia has been slower than many nations to move into distance education. The Kingdom has had a very short history of using printed, electronic, or broadcast means for students who are not physically on site.
Experiencing higher education capacity issues, and anxious to improve the knowledge and skills of its citizens, Saudi Arabia now recognizes the need to adopt distance education as part of its educational and development strategies.
Bachelor degree programs have only been offered through traditional universities’ distance education programs for about a decade, and policies for single-mode, distance, and virtual tertiary institutions are still under development for approval by the Ministry of Higher Education.
Some public universities, such as King Abdulaziz University and Al-Imam Mohammad ibn Saud Islamic University, are dual-mode while single-mode distance education is offered by the Arab Open University.
Distance education is primarily applied where gender segregation is required in tertiary education, where male lecturers are only authorized to teach female students by means of closed-circuit television, one-way video and two-way audio and broadcast.
3 Online Learning Programs in Saudi Arabia Three examples illustrate recent developments in Saudi distance education. The first is the establishment of the Deanship and Faculty of Distance Learning at King Abdulaziz University in Jeddah, designed to provide distance learning in the western region of the country. Its first academic year of operation was 2007-2008, and its programs are offered by the Faculty of Arts and Humanities and Faculty of Economics and Administration.
These programs involve blended learning, the virtual class room system (CENTRA), which provides lectures over the internet and the e-learning management electronic system, which facilitates interaction between students and faculty. The Deanship is also responsible for training and certificating faculty members and individuals outside the university in distance education as well as students using the system. King Abdulaziz University is also the permanent headquarters of the Saudi Distance Learning Society.
The second example is the Al-Imam Muhammad ibn Saud Islamic University. The school has been authorized by the Ministry of Higher Education to offer distance education courses leading to bachelor degrees. Admission is open to all Saudi and non-Saudi students in all majors. Lectures are transmitted live via the internet on a daily basis, and these transmissions are also recorded and uploaded onto a web site for students to watch at their convenience.
Student-lecturers communication occurs via emails, forums, and virtual classrooms. In 2008, more than 6,000 students were admitted to the university, and more than 15,000 are currently enrolled in the program (Imam, 2009).
The third example, showing how distance learning methods and technology can be used to improve higher education opportunities and facilities for female students, has been the use of very small aperture terminal (VSAT) broadcasting technology and the internet to teach more than 300 masters’ students in 36 Girls Colleges.
The Girls’ Colleges, which previously operated under the umbrella of General Presidency for Girls Education, a subsidiary of the Ministry of Education, now operate under the aegis of the Princess Noura University. The first part of this project was in the first semester of 2006 with the cultural, religious, and economics lectures broadcast from Riyadh to the Girls’ Colleges around the Kingdom; the second part was concerned with the development of e-learning curriculums which was hosted on the General Presidency for Girls Education web site (Al-Kethery, 2006).
Private vs. Public Like most Arab countries, Saudi Arabia has yet to authorize alternative providers, such as private institutions or virtual universities. However, the private but non-profit Arab Open University, which was founded in 2002 in Kuwait, Jordan, and Lebanon and subsequently opened branches in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Egypt, has been accredited by the Ministry of Higher Education and National Commission for Academic Accreditation and Assessment (NCAAA).
The Arab Open University is sponsored by the Arab Gulf Program for United Nations Development Organizations and is affiliated with the U.K. Open University. It has fully accredited regional centres in Saudi Arabia in Jeddah, Ahsa, Dammam, Hail, and Medina. It has three faculties: business studies; language studies (English language); and information technology and computing.
Students learn via the Moodle-based learning management system, interactive multimedia lectures, face-to-face lectures and practical sessions and study texts. The lectures are also made available via DVDs, streaming video, and video formats for portable devices such as mobile phones and iPods.
Computing facilities and wireless internet access are available in all of the regional centres, which are equipped with separate labs for male and female students. Most of the classrooms are also equipped with instructors’ PCs, multimedia kits, and video-conferencing equipment for teaching and intra-branch meetings and male-female closed circuit TV transmission. There are currently plans to equip students with state-of-the-art laptops.
The Arab Open University subscribes to a number of world-class digital libraries and these online resources are also accessible to the students through the learning-management system. Arab Open University enrollees must have successfully completed their secondary education, be proficient in English, and able to afford the relatively high fees. Collaboration, partnership and licensing agreements between the Arab Open University and the U.K. Open University allow it to adopt and adapt U.K. learning materials for its own use, be accredited by U.K. Open University Validation Services, and award its own degrees.
However, Arab Open University degrees are not universally recognized throughout the region, even in Lebanon, despite the school having one of its branches there and having established quality assurance units in all of its branches (Abouchedid & Eid, 2004).
Virtual Universities and Foreign Accreditation Another interesting development has been the launch of the Knowledge International University, the first virtual university in Saudi Arabia. Knowledge International University, or KIU, is a non-profit, Islamic, virtual university offering bachelor-level degrees programs from the College of Sharee’ah and Qur’anic studies and the College of Islamic Studies for non-Arabic Speakers.
KIU has gathered an international array of leading scholars of high repute to supervise and deliver academically sound curricula in the various traditional disciplines of learning. Entrants to KIU must have either hold high school certificates or pass an admissions exam. They study by using a mix of PDF study materials, audio and video recorded lectures, and live lectures. Each subject consists of 25 live and recorded lectures. The attendance policy mandates that students listen to at least 15 of the 20 recorded lectures but be physically present at four of the five live lectures.
In 2008, KIU had students in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, and Morocco. KIU is seeking to expand its range of courses. It was also seeking accreditation from the Ministry of Higher Education, a process which had been delayed by the Ministry’s finalizing of the rules and regulations governing e-learning and accreditation from other Arabic and international institutions.
The Ministry has not yet moved to accredit online distance education provided by international universities because it currently stipulates that to approve a degree from any international university, the students must be able to present evidence that their time is dedicated to studying on a full-time basis while residing in the country where the degree was earned. Thus, not surprisingly, unaccredited online universities play a much smaller role than organizations-funded universities.
However, some Saudi students enroll in courses offered by University of Phoenix Online, the largest private, accredited university in the U.S., and premier educational provider for working professionals throughout the world.
Given the increasing population rates and expansion of the main cities in Saudi Arabia, distance education would appear to be an obvious means of widening access and offering quality and flexibility in programs of choice. However, there are some constraining factors. Distance education is often looked upon by academic staff as less scholarly, less rewarding, and offering fewer career advantages. There is still a lack of funding and insufficient ICT infrastructure. The students too may be resistance to change since most of them are comfortable with traditional classroom education and lack the motivation for self-directed learning.
But I would expect these constraints to diminish over time as more students reap the advantages of distance education, and the government and universities appreciate the need to extend and improve tertiary education opportunities and take advantage of technology.
About the Author Hend Suliman Al-Khalifa is on eLearnMag.org’s editorial board, and she is an assistant professor at the Information Technology Department, CCIS, King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. She received her MSc degree in Information Systems (2001) from King Saud University, Riyadh, KSA, and her PhD degree in Computer Science (2007) from Southampton University, U.K. For more about her work and interests, please see the About Us page.
References Al-Kethery, M. (2006, 6 23). Women’s colleges in Saudi apply distance education faculty and 38 associated with the center in Riyadh. Retrieved 9 2, 2009, from Al-Riyadh News Papaer: http://www.alriyadh.com/2006/06/23/article165515.html
Abouchedid, K., & Eid, G. (2004). E-learning challenges in the Arab world:. Quality Assurance in Education , 12 (1), 15-27.
Imam. (2009). Distance Learning Open for All: Dean. Retrieved 9 2, 2009, from Al-Imam Muhammad ibn Saud Islamic University: http://www.imamu.edu.sa/sites/en/news/Pages/news_25-8-1429_1.aspx
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