Gulf News

‘Top employers don’t look at degrees’

EXPERTS: JOB-SEEKERS WITH EXPERIENCE AND ATTITUDE EDGING OUT GRADUATES BOTH IN PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SECTORS

- DUBAI BY FAISAL MASUDI Staff Reporter

UAE government department­s and private firms are dropping university degrees as requiremen­ts for employment in line with a growing global trend, experts said yesterday in Dubai.

Employers now hire candidates with the right experience and attitude over candidates with degrees, even if they are from top universiti­es, panellists said during the launch of GEMS Xhibit 2018, an initiative of Dubai-based GEMS Education private school group.

Their comments followed a talk by Omar Bin Sultan Al Olama, Minister of State for Artificial Intelligen­ce, who encouraged students to arm themselves with “the weapon of knowledge” to compete against machines in the future.

Dino Varkey, CEO of GEMS Education, said he had full faith in the talent of GEMS students, saying he would not hesitate to hire them.

Panellist Dr Sayd Farooq, adviser to the Dubai Executive Office - the main decision-making government body in Dubai - said the entity has dropped degrees as a requiremen­t for employment.

“We realised that experience is far more valuable than the degrees you hold, because they [degrees] are proxies,” Dr Farooq said.

The trend is part of wider changes, led by the Council, for government department­s seeking to hire “experienti­al thinkers ■ ■ who can do things others cannot do”.

Dr Farooq, who himself is a PhD holder, said Dubai and UAE government department­s “are not going to be looking for the Ivy League graduates because those marks were proxies for quality - quality for a bygone era. Now the proxy for quality is experience — real and proven experience in experiment­ation”.

He was referring to programmes such as Dubai 10X, which aims to enable government department­s to introduce technology and solutions of the future, today. Experiment­ation, and even initial failures, are part of this process, Dr Farooq said.

Panellist Syed Hashish, Regional General Manager, Microsoft, said: “I think university degrees in some cases are important. However, what we look at now in attracting new talent is actual potential.”

Microsoft was founded by Bill Gates, who dropout.

Hashish added: “What we look for — university graduate or not — are people who demonstrat­e a ‘growth mind-set’. People who are willing to experiment, have empathy, listen to others, and shift the mindset from ‘a know it all’ to ‘a learn it all’.

“Because the pace of change we are seeing, whatever skill you have, it will be obsolete. So we want people that can grow, learn and prosper in the longer term, whether, again, they are university graduates or not.”

Dee Dissanayak­e, success executive at Oliv, an online portal for students and fresh graduates seeking internship­s, part-time and graduate jobs, said the trend has been boosted in the UAE by a new work permit for teens.

The panel discussion took place as part of the first-ever GEMS Xhibit, a new technology and innovation showcase platform hosted by GEMS Education. GEMS X, GEMS Education’s innovation and R&D unit and GEMS Student Employment initiative, which aims to offer experienti­al learning for students, were also launched.

Varkey said: “At GEMS Education, we focus on promoting the innovation and creative skills of our students. The GEMS Xhibit served as an excellent platform for our talented students to showcase their impressive talents to heads of industry. It also offered a perfect complement for us to launch our GEMS Student Employment programme that enables our students to gain real-world experience.” is a university

 ?? Atiq Ur Rehman/Gulf News ?? Grade 11 students of Winchester School Jebel Ali demonstrat­e a wearable device catering to those who have anxiety attacks at GEMS Xhibit 2018 in Dubai yesterday.Right: Grade 10 students demonstrat­e Merculite, an electricit­y-generating device.
Atiq Ur Rehman/Gulf News Grade 11 students of Winchester School Jebel Ali demonstrat­e a wearable device catering to those who have anxiety attacks at GEMS Xhibit 2018 in Dubai yesterday.Right: Grade 10 students demonstrat­e Merculite, an electricit­y-generating device.
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