A Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi graduation ceremony. Top universities are immersing themselves in the UAE’s unique environment. Chris Whiteoak / The National
A Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi graduation ceremony. Top universities are immersing themselves in the UAE’s unique environment. Chris Whiteoak / The National
A Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi graduation ceremony. Top universities are immersing themselves in the UAE’s unique environment. Chris Whiteoak / The National
A Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi graduation ceremony. Top universities are immersing themselves in the UAE’s unique environment. Chris Whiteoak / The National


How education in the UAE is evolving for a changing world


Hareth Alhashmi
Hareth Alhashmi
  • English
  • Arabic

February 28, 2025

For decades, education systems have followed a familiar pattern. Go to school. Get a degree. Enter the workforce. It was a model built for predictability. For economies where industries changed slowly. For a time when a single skill set could last an entire career. That is not the world we live in any more.

Education can no longer be a pipeline that ends with graduation. It has to be a living system, one that adapts as fast as the world around it. One that does not just prepare people for jobs that exist today, but equips them to create the industries of tomorrow.

Few places are better positioned to lead this shift than the UAE. Today, the country marks its first Emirati Day for Education – a moment to reflect on how far it has come, but more importantly, a moment to ask: what comes next?

Because here is the thing: the UAE is not just building a better education system. It is building a new kind of education ecosystem altogether.

The UAE has become a global testbed for the evolution of education. Top universities and schools are not just expanding here; they are immersing themselves in the UAE’s unique environment to rethink what education must become for a rapidly changing world.

Institutions such as Harrow School Abu Dhabi, Cranleigh Abu Dhabi, Georgetown University Dubai, NYU Abu Dhabi, and many others from around the world have chosen the UAE not just as a location, but as a laboratory for the future of education.

And that is what makes the UAE different. It is not importing education models. It is shaping them.

In most countries, global institutions bring their systems, plug them in, and carry on as usual. In the UAE, the opposite happens. The country’s diversity, global positioning and rapid economic shifts challenge these institutions to evolve.

What happens when your student body represents 200 nationalities? When government and industry are constantly reinventing themselves? When entire sectors – AI, space, sustainability – are being built in real time? You do not just teach differently. You redefine what education itself must become.

Universities and schools here are experimenting with new approaches to interdisciplinary learning, leadership development and technology integration. They are moving beyond traditional degree structures, testing lifelong learning models that follow students into their careers. They are aligning education with real industry needs, so that graduates do not just enter the workforce – they shape it.

And they are doing it because of the UAE, not in spite of it. But the most important shift is not happening inside classrooms. It is happening outside them.

The UAE has never been afraid to redefine what a country can do, how fast it can do it, and what it can contribute to the world. Education should be no different

The UAE is not just asking how to improve education. It is asking how to rewire the entire talent system, so that learning and work do not just interact, but also evolve together. This shift is already happening.

Dubai’s private school students ranked fifth globally in science and seventh in maths, outperforming many advanced economies. Abu Dhabi University jumped 60 places to rank 191st globally in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings, while Khalifa University is now among the top 30 young universities worldwide. The UAE’s investments in AI, sustainability and space exploration are not just shaping industries, they are also reshaping the skills that education needs to prioritise.

At the same time, homegrown innovation is taking root.

Schools such as Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Awal School (KBZA) in Abu Dhabi and Najmara in Dubai are redefining what future-ready learning looks like. KBZA fuses Emirati heritage with modern pedagogy, proving that global education does not have to come at the expense of local identity. Najmara is giving traditional education entirely, making it more hands-on, character-driven, deeply tied to the world beyond the classroom.

Together, these approaches form a blueprint for what education could be. One where learning is lifelong. Where education is not something you complete, but something that grows with you.

There is an old assumption in education. Build great schools, and the rest will take care of itself. But in today’s world, the real measure of an education system is not how many students graduate – it is what those graduates go on to build, solve and lead.

Imagine an education model where degrees are not just credentials but embedded in national projects, global problem-solving and leadership training. Where AI-driven, real-time learning adapts to industry shifts, ensuring that what students learn remains relevant.

This is not a distant vision. It is a challenge – one the UAE is positioned to answer. This is not just about celebrating what the country has achieved; it is about committing to what is possible next.

The UAE has never been afraid to redefine what a country can do, how fast it can do it, and what it can contribute to the world. Education should be no different.

The future will not be shaped by those who wait for the perfect system to emerge. It will be built by those who design it first. The UAE has that opportunity. Now is the time to seize it.

READ MORE: Education in Abu Dhabi is a collective responsibility

What is an ETF?

An exchange traded fund is a type of investment fund that can be traded quickly and easily, just like stocks and shares. They come with no upfront costs aside from your brokerage's dealing charges and annual fees, which are far lower than on traditional mutual investment funds. Charges are as low as 0.03 per cent on one of the very cheapest (and most popular), Vanguard S&P 500 ETF, with the maximum around 0.75 per cent.

There is no fund manager deciding which stocks and other assets to invest in, instead they passively track their chosen index, country, region or commodity, regardless of whether it goes up or down.

The first ETF was launched as recently as 1993, but the sector boasted $5.78 billion in assets under management at the end of September as inflows hit record highs, according to the latest figures from ETFGI, a leading independent research and consultancy firm.

There are thousands to choose from, with the five largest providers BlackRock’s iShares, Vanguard, State Street Global Advisers, Deutsche Bank X-trackers and Invesco PowerShares.

While the best-known track major indices such as MSCI World, the S&P 500 and FTSE 100, you can also invest in specific countries or regions, large, medium or small companies, government bonds, gold, crude oil, cocoa, water, carbon, cattle, corn futures, currency shifts or even a stock market crash. 

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Which honey takes your fancy?

Al Ghaf Honey

The Al Ghaf tree is a local desert tree which bears the harsh summers with drought and high temperatures. From the rich flowers, bees that pollinate this tree can produce delicious red colour honey in June and July each year

Sidr Honey

The Sidr tree is an evergreen tree with long and strong forked branches. The blossom from this tree is called Yabyab, which provides rich food for bees to produce honey in October and November. This honey is the most expensive, but tastiest

Samar Honey

The Samar tree trunk, leaves and blossom contains Barm which is the secret of healing. You can enjoy the best types of honey from this tree every year in May and June. It is an historical witness to the life of the Emirati nation which represents the harsh desert and mountain environments

Difference between fractional ownership and timeshare

Although similar in its appearance, the concept of a fractional title deed is unlike that of a timeshare, which usually involves multiple investors buying “time” in a property whereby the owner has the right to occupation for a specified period of time in any year, as opposed to the actual real estate, said John Peacock, Head of Indirect Tax and Conveyancing, BSA Ahmad Bin Hezeem & Associates, a law firm.

Updated: March 01, 2025, 6:30 PM`