The National - News

Education minister targets skills gap

Many graduates do not meet job market’s needs

- Melanie Swan

DUBAI // The Minister of Higher Education has launched a new department to address the country’s growing skills gap.

Universiti­es and industry must work together to collect data to overcome the concern, which has reached the highest levels of government, the minister said.

Speaking at the UAE Public Policy Forum yesterday, Dr Ahmad Belhoul said that a gap existed between Emirati “graduates and the needs of the job market. Forty per cent of students have skills which aren’t needed in the market”.

The minister created the new department in the ministry with the aim of better directing graduates towards the types of jobs the country requires.

“Are graduates working in the fields they are studying? Are they working in the public or private sector?

“These are the questions we must ask and we need to collect data and knowledge. We should have follow- up with the graduates,” Dr Belhoul said. “This department focuses on the skills gap to study the situation and to read the needs of the job market.”

A centre for higher education data and statistics was establishe­d in 2012 but staffing issues led to its demise about two years later. The database, as it was envisioned, would have been an invaluable tool for policy-makers and researcher­s, collecting data on areas from Emirati enrolment to graduation data and research activity.

Ahmad Abdulla bin Byat, vice chairman of Dubai Holding, said “data is really urgent”.

“I regularly participat­e in forums such as this and people often speak of the lack of data and statistica­l reports we have on students and graduates,” he said.

“All our data is operationa­l and we need more than that. We need data to make intelligen­t, strategic planning and decision-making.”

Mr bin Byat said it was up to government and industry to state their needs, because the jobs market was constantly changing. “Ten years ago we needed accountant­s, paediatric­ians, surgeons, but that gap got bigger and bigger,” he said.

Prof Raed Awamleh, the moderator of the panel and dean of the Mohammed bin Rashid School of Government, said students must be better trained for the jobs of the future.

“Sixty five per cent of students will be working in jobs not available now,” he said.

Dr Essa Bastaki, president of the University of Dubai, said further studies were needed “to stand behind the gaps”. Dr Mohamed Yousif Baniyas, executive director of higher education at Abu Dhabi Education Council , cited the healthcare industry as an example. “Thirty per cent of medical students are dermatolog­ists and 40 per cent are dentists, but we have a lack of intensive- care doctors. We need to minimise these gaps,” he said. Dr Belhoul said graduates lacked skills such as team-building and critical thinking. “Now the market has more requiremen­ts, there have to be other skills,” he said, adding that students must pursue lifelong education.

“Continuing education, which was considered to be for older people, is for everyone now,” he said. “The private sector looks for excellent graduates, so we must raise awareness that things are changing.

“Thirty years ago, 90 per cent of Emiratis worked in the public sector. We expect many of the Emirati graduates of the future to work in the private sector. It’s a quantum leap.” Dr Belhoul’s views mirror Government leaders’ calls for change. Last Wednesday, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, told students that the UAE would need new generation­s of engineers and scientists as it shifts from being an oil-dependent economy towards a knowledge-based future.

A day earlier, Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, told Emirati youth to think beyond expectatio­ns of “comfortabl­e” government jobs and prepare to compete with the rest of the world.

“If you want to participat­e in shaping the future then you need to stop thinking of a government job,” he said.

“No other country in the region supports youth- led projects like the UAE. It is one of the easiest countries to set up and run a business, so start your own business.”

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