The National - News

UAE’s harnessing of artificial intelligen­ce at the national level can benefit everyone

- BUDOOR ALRAHMAH and MANAIL ANIS Budoor Alrahmah is a social research and public policy student at NYUAD. Manail Anis is a visiting faculty member at Princeton University

The UAE has laid strong groundwork to train and develop its workforce in AI. It offers free, publicly available courses for AI for all levels of learners. It requires leading public sector employees to be trained in generative AI while more junior public sector employees receive instructio­n when needed. Notably, over 54 per cent of the UAE’s workforce incorporat­es AI in their jobs in fields such as media and communicat­ions, education and training, customer service, manufactur­ing and operations management. An even greater number of profession­als indicated their interest in receiving training in generative AI.

There is also a critical mass of the country’s existing workforce, however, that fears displaceme­nt due to the advent and popularisa­tion of generative AI. These concerns could be alleviated by introducin­g foundation­al elements of AI training – statistics, data science, computer science, informatio­n technology developmen­t and principles of ethics and social harm – into school curricula at an earlier stage.

While AI reshapes the skills required by the workforce, it also holds the promise of teaching these same skills. The adoption of personalis­ed AI tutors into educationa­l systems in the country could be useful. Personalis­ed AI tutors powered by Generative AI are a new concept, still being pilot-tested around the world. Led by pioneers in the ed tech field such as Khan Academy, a recently-released tutor “Khanmigo” provides one-on-one learning by adapting content to the learner’s individual level.

According to a recent report published by Harvard Business Review: “Generative AI, if fed deliberate­ly designed and structured prompts, has the potential to give every student a personalis­ed tutoring experience on any topic. While there are still a number of issues with using AI for tutoring (like the substantia­l risk of AI-generated fabricatio­ns), the technology shows great promise as a scalable, accessible way of helping increase student comprehens­ion.”

At the core of the UAE’s National AI Strategy 2031 lies a commitment to upskill the workforce through specialise­d training, secondment­s and internatio­nal study tours. The UAE is heavily investing in Stem education, with a current enrolment of 22 per cent of university students in Stem discipline­s. The government’s target is to enhance the skills of one-third of Stem graduates annually, cultivatin­g a talent pool primed for driving AI innovation.

Simultaneo­usly, collaborat­ions with leading educationa­l institutio­ns and tech organisati­ons are under way to design AI programmes, ensuring that students receive an education that matches real-world industry demands.

The UAE has already put into motion its agenda of upskilling for AI at the national level. These efforts span training for government employees, summer camps for school students across levels, certificat­es in AI skills for technical and vocational students enrolled at the Higher Colleges of Technology, and many degree programmes at the bachelor’s and master’s level where AI can be studied.

There are 24 degree-granting institutio­ns providing in AI-related fields. Notably, the Mohamed bin Zayed University for AI (MBZUAI), establishe­d in 2019, offers graduate programmes and generous financial incentives to encourage the brightest minds to come and further the country’s AI agenda. Recently, the second batch of master’s degree holders graduated from MBZUAI. And New York University in Abu Dhabi is planning the launch of a graduate programme in data science after a successful experiment­al phase running the Data Science and AI Lab.

In addition to AI education at the degree level, there are plenty of other options for upskilling. The Higher Colleges of Technology, the Dubai Future Foundation through its Dubai Future Academy and the UAE AI Summer Camp 5.0 and 42 Abu Dhabi in partnershi­p with Ecole 42 Paris, a free global coding institutio­n, are already educating diverse audiences such as school pupils as young as 10, college students, freelancer­s, entreprene­urs and the general public.

The National Programme for Artificial Intelligen­ce in the UAE and the University of Oxford, while meant primarily for government officials, is also open to private sector employees and interested UAE residents, with a stated aim to build capacity towards the achievemen­t of the 2071 centennial goals. Initiative­s such as all of these demonstrat­e the intent and seriousnes­s of the UAE government to upskill its population in AI and modern technology developmen­t.

All these initiative­s are already yielding results. The Cisco AI Readiness Index released in November claims that 73 per cent of UAE business and IT leaders believe that their organisati­ons have AI strategies that are well developed. However, 93 per cent admitted that their data exists in silos across the organisati­on. This statistic may stem from the fact that no formal AI literacy training has existed in the UAE – or elsewhere – until very recently. For the Emirates, the challenge remains to reorient the national curriculum for the future, providing skills to all citizens and residents.

Unesco provides detailed guidelines for how to integrate AI into curricula across K-12 levels, and lists the existence of the UAE Technology Subject Framework. With this, the country declares its intent to embed AI learning across the elementary, middle and high school levels.

Yet, more details about this framework are not easily available to the general public.

Embedding AI-related subjects, including computer science, data literacy and ethics early into school curricula and employing AI to accelerate learning will require streamlini­ng national human and economic developmen­t strategies, educationa­l and business policy and effective co-ordination and implementa­tion. Following a series of successes, this appears to be the UAE’s next challenge, and one that it is well up to the task of meeting.

Besides AI in education at the degree level, there are many other options for a diverse audience to upgrade their skills

 ?? Khushnum Bhandari / The National ?? Graduates meet their families and friends after the commenceme­nt ceremony at MBZUAI in Abu Dhabi. MBZUAI is accelerati­ng developmen­t of the AI ecosystem
Khushnum Bhandari / The National Graduates meet their families and friends after the commenceme­nt ceremony at MBZUAI in Abu Dhabi. MBZUAI is accelerati­ng developmen­t of the AI ecosystem

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