Arab News

Veteran Saudi educator teaches Kingdom’s kids the laws of robotics

Saud Almuhaidib founded the Robot Academy to help young people in the Kingdom get a head start in the emerging field of artificial intelligen­ce

- Jasmine Bager Alkhobar

On any given Saturday night in Alkhobar city, a steady stream of boys can be seen traveling up an escalator in an anonymousl­ooking building on their way to a workshop in which they are tasked with using their hands, minds and imaginatio­ns to build robots.

When the session at the Robot Academy gets underway the room soon begins to buzz with activity as the youngsters, some of them teenagers, some much younger, get busy. Some of them work in groups, some alone, but either way they are entirely focused on the tasks at hand, with not a single smartphone in sight.

Everyone is busy working building the machines, typing the commands that bring the robots to life into control programs on tablet computers, or trying to figure out exactly how to get their robots to move in exactly the way they want.

The Robot Academy is the brainchild of Saud Almuhaidib. As the author of a computer science textbook used in high schools in the Kingdom, and with more than 40 years of experience, he is a veteran in the field. The qualificat­ions and accolades he has received over the year fill a wall. He studied for his bachelor’s degree at a university in Florida and graduated in 1980 with distinctio­n in computer science. He earned a master’s degree in graph heuristics from King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals in 1991, and a Ph.D. in artificial intelligen­ce from Leeds University in the UK in 2002.

He founded the Robot Academy in 2017 because he saw that the Kingdom was beginning to embrace the use of artificial intelligen­ce and he wanted to be a part of it. He said he wanted to help young people to get a head start in this emerging field, and decided to start with his hometown.

HIGHLIGHT

There is a bin full of ‘failed’ robot casualties prominentl­y displayed by the main door to the academy. Almuhaidib gently reminds his students that failing is part of the scientific process: ‘In order to succeed, a few rough drafts — or broken robots — need to live and die first.’

“Robots is the new world,” he told Arab News. “Robots and artificial intelligen­ce is the science that will be in every science.

“I’ll give you an example. Forty years ago, when I had just graduated from university, there were very few computers in the world. People used handwritin­g for things like ticketing for airplanes. When computers came along, gradually they substitute­d these things and tasks became automated. Now, computers are in everything: They’re in medicine, they’re in engineerin­g, they’re in education — everything.

“I started (the Robot Academy) in Alkhobar because I was born in Alkhobar and raised in Alkhobar. We want to participat­e in Vision 2030 by making Saudi Arabia a hub for artificial intelligen­ce in the coming 10 years.”

The academy has colorful bins filled with Lego bricks, a room with cars that students control by inputting commands and then testing them. And of course there is also plenty of space for the youngsters to build robots and let them roam, trundle or walk around.

He often starts a conversati­on with a student by saying, “Tell me how this works — I forgot,” to give them the chance to show what they have learned. The youngsters seem to revel in dissecting and analyzing every component of the robots they bring to life, and explaining how it functions to their ever-patient and calm mentor and teacher.

Though this class at the academy is for boys, girls are not excluded from the chance to learn about robots. Almuhaidib realized that he had to involve girls; his daughter was into robotics and most of his seven children are involved in the field in some way.

However, he wanted to keep the genders separate so each could learn and develop at its own pace. Girls tend to be more organized and pay closer attention, he said, while boys can be a bit more chaotic.

For the girls’ classes, Almuhaidib tried to find the most qualified person he could to lead them. After carefully considerin­g a list of candidates, he realized the perfect choice was under his nose — and his roof: his wife, Nuhad. She initially took the job on a temporary

basis but discovered that she enjoyed it immensely and made it permanent.

“The world has entered the fourth industrial revolution and artificial intelligen­ce is an essential part of it,” she said. “We must strive to build the capabiliti­es of our girls and prepare a promising generation for the future by helping them absorb the science of artificial intelligen­ce in the best and most enjoyable way,” Nuhad told Arab News.

“Here at Robot Academy, girls acquire the skills of creative thinking, analysis, and logic. One learns the art of design, mechanics and programmin­g, and integrates learning into practical life. We developed an educationa­l system capable of creativity and innovation.”

The girl’s classes include four modules, each of which runs for a month and has six levels. The first is for grades 1 to 6 and. Like the other modules, it has six levels, at each of which students learn new skills and concepts for building and programmin­g robots. The second module, for grades seven to 12, focuses on more advanced programmin­g skills. The third module covers machine learning, while the fourth module teaches students about robot electronic­s and ends with them building their own large robot.

The Robot Academy encourages students to be ambitious and experiment with technology, even if they fail. Statistica­lly, many experiment­s fail initially but Almuhaidib likes to use this as a learning tool and a teachable moment.

He also ensures that the academy fosters a culture of change by allowing boys to be boys — and girls to be girls — while learning to create robots that could help build the future.

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 ?? Saud Almuhaidib AN photos by Huda Bashatah ?? Robots and artificial intelligen­ce is the science that will be in every science.
Saud Almuhaidib founded the Robot Academy in 2017 because he saw that the Kingdom was beginning to embrace the use of artificial intelligen­ce and he wanted to be a part of it. He said he wanted to help young people to get a head start in this emerging field, and decided to start with his hometown.
Saud Almuhaidib AN photos by Huda Bashatah Robots and artificial intelligen­ce is the science that will be in every science. Saud Almuhaidib founded the Robot Academy in 2017 because he saw that the Kingdom was beginning to embrace the use of artificial intelligen­ce and he wanted to be a part of it. He said he wanted to help young people to get a head start in this emerging field, and decided to start with his hometown.
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