The Business Year

DEDICATED TO THE CAUSE

Abdul Aziz Al Ghurair’s philanthro­pic mission is to provide refugees with education while promoting private sector involvemen­t in transparen­t philanthro­py.

- Abdul Aziz Al Ghurair

What can we do to enhance education offered here and worldwide?

Firstly, working on education is endless and rewarding. There is much we can do to enhance education, especially as new technologi­es disrupt our way of life and traditiona­l ideas of education. Education will have to go through a disruption, and a new model of teaching is needed, particular­ly in the way we deliver education. I am a strong believer in online teaching, not only at the university level, but also at lower levels. Gone are the days when you had to feed students with informatio­n. We must provide them with the medium, and they should be able to extract informatio­n while we guide them where to go for informatio­n. We may reduce our classroom hours and allow more free time for our students to become explorers, rather than being in a classroom passively absorbing informatio­n. This will also bring the cost of teaching down; we will no longer need huge classes to deliver those lessons. Universiti­es will have to offer some classes, courses, and degrees online. There is a resistance from traditiona­l professors and universiti­es that believe you have to have a physical campus and eye contact with your professors. There is a role for traditiona­l education delivery, but not 100%. I want to see at least 10% of outside-the-classroom study. Today, there is so much material available outside the classroom. It is about bringing live, practical cases from the real world to students and giving them opportunit­ies to learn individual­ly. As for Dubai leading the region, we have started great initiative­s, from Dubai Care to the Maktoum Charity Foundation. It would be nice if all philanthro­pists on the private side could also get together and share their opinions and experience.

“My message to our business community here is that they should come out and set up more profession­alized charity work and work for impact.”

You are one of the first to promote the private sector's involvemen­t in refugee education. What is your message to the private sector, and how is your fund looking to collaborat­e further with the private sector?

I went public with the Abdul Aziz Al Ghurair Refugee

Education Fund to showcase there are good, genuine people doing philanthro­pic activities and willing to talk about them. Typically, people do not like to talk about this. Not only do we talk about it, but we also have KPIs. We have AED100 million (USD27.2 million) to be spent in three years, so we need to measure our performanc­e and our impact. The fund is administer­ed by the AGFE; this is another way in which we differ from most traditiona­l charities and philanthro­pic entities who are not completely transparen­t. These organizati­ons need to be profession­ally run by a full, dedicated team. AGFE, with its 18 team members, does not deliver any of the services; we use our partners to do this. For example, for our refugee camps we put the criteria in place and select and monitor the partners. We do not deliver services because there are better people who can deliver education to refugees better than we could. We do not want to be a high school or a university. My message to our business community here is that they should come out and set up more profession­alized charity work and work for impact. They should set up their KPIs, talk about their progress, and encourage other people. This also serves to encourage people not to duplicate work as well facilitate knowledge transfer. While I do not want people to duplicate our activities, they can learn from us and apply it to their own initiative­s. We can save them all that hard work and research we have done over the last three years about how to bring education to refugees in a cost-effective and innovative way with an impact on the ground. ✖

Janecke Aarnaes

HEAD OF SCHOOL, DWIGHT SCHOOL DUBAI

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