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Education
   

Saudi Arabia’s education system has gone through an astonishing transformation. When the Kingdom was established in 1932, education was available to very few people, mostly the children of wealthy families living in the major cities.

Today, Saudi Arabia’s public education system includes 11 universities, with more planned; some 25,000 schools; and a large number of colleges and other institutions. The system is open to all citizens, and provides students with free education, books and health services.


While the study of Islam remains at its core, the modern Saudi educational system also provides quality instruction in diverse fields of arts and sciences. This diversity helps the Kingdom prepare its citizens for life and work in a global economy.
 

 

Education is a requirement for every Muslim, both male and female. The Holy Qur’an and the Hadith [teachings and practices of the Prophet Muhammad] repeatedly emphasize the importance of learning.


In the centuries after the birth of Islam (632 AD), Muslim states established schools, universities and libraries that were unique in the world.  At a time when Europe was mired in the Dark Ages, the Islamic world became a center for learning, making major contributions in the areas of astronomy, physics, art, philosophy, and medicine – a period known as the “Golden Age.”

Methods pioneered by Muslim scholars and scientists during the Golden Age became the foundation of modern sciences, and were taught in European universities up to the 18th century.


Formal primary education began in Saudi Arabia in the 1930s. By 1945, King Abdulaziz bin Abdelrahman Al-Saud, the country’s founder, had begun an extensive program to establish schools in the Kingdom. Six years later, in 1951, the country had 226 schools with 29,887 students.

The first university, now known as King Saud University, was founded in Riyadh in 1957.  In 1954, the Ministry of Education was established, followed by the Ministry of Higher Education in 1975. 

The first government school for girls was built in 1964, and by the end of the 1990s girls’ schools had been established in every part of the Kingdom. Today, female students make up a little over half of the nearly 5 million students currently enrolled in Saudi schools and universities.
 

 

Related Information: Education


RecentNews:
 
05/08/2008   Saudi scholar urges teachers to warn students against traveling to Iraq
05/05/2008   Shura Council approves agreements with the UK, Finland and Poland
05/05/2008   Terms extended for rectors of Al-Qassim, Taif and Taybah universities
05/04/2008   Saudi Ambassador attends annual Saudi student board meeting


Other Documents:


General Education
The objectives of Saudi educational policy are to ensure that education becomes more efficient, to meet the religious, economic and social needs of the country and to eradicate illiteracy among Saudi adults.



Saudi Schools Overseas
As part of its efforts to make education available to Saudi students residing abroad, the Kingdom has established a number of educational institutions throughout the world, with the three largest in the United States, Britain and Germany.


Higher Education
Entering a new era of rapid development of the country's infrastructure and economy in the early 1970s, Saudi Arabia devoted special attention to fostering higher education.



Special and Adult Education
The Special Education Department of the Ministry of Education operates schools for the blind, deaf and the physically and mentally handicapped. Other institutes care for older handicapped people.


Training in Saudi Arabia
The Kingdom has identified technical and administrative training as an essential sector of education to support the country's economic and social development.






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