logo
Sheikh Mohammed: AI Now Mandatory in the UAE Schools

Sheikh Mohammed: AI Now Mandatory in the UAE Schools

Web Release12-05-2025

By Editor_wr Last updated May 12, 2025
The UAE has introduced a pioneering artificial intelligence curriculum designed to modernise the education system and prepare students for future challenges. This initiative places the nation at the forefront of technological integration in learning, fostering innovation and adaptability among young learners.
The UAE's Ministry of Education has formally announced the inclusion of artificial intelligence as a subject across public schools, covering all levels from kindergarten to Year 12, beginning in the 2025–2026 academic year. This significant step is intended to equip students with essential knowledge and practical skills to comprehend AI concepts and apply them in real-life situations. It reflects the country's broader strategy to empower its youth to adapt to global changes and drive innovation. With this move, the UAE solidifies its status as one of the first countries globally to incorporate AI into its national curriculum.
This initiative also aligns with the UAE's long-term goal of becoming a global leader in artificial intelligence and digital transformation. In partnership with organisations such as Presight, a G42 company, AI71, Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence, and the Emirates College for Advanced Education, the Ministry of Education aims to accelerate the adoption of technology in schools. This effort supports the nation's vision to invest in its people and develop an education system equipped to meet future demands and support sustainable development.
UAE Minister of Education Sarah Al Amiri stated that introducing AI across all public school levels represents a strategic shift in education that enhances learning tools and nurtures a generation well-versed in technological ethics and capable of developing intelligent, locally relevant solutions. She noted that the integration of AI reflects the UAE Government's future-focused agenda, reinforcing its leadership in innovation-driven education and advancing its goal of building a knowledge-based society and competitive digital economy led by skilled Emiratis.
His Highness Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Foreign Affairs, and Chairman of the Education, Human Development and Community Development Council, confirmed that integrating AI into the public education system marks a strategic achievement in line with the UAE's forward-looking educational vision. He emphasised that this step highlights the country's dedication to nurturing future generations equipped with the tools required to thrive in an increasingly technology-driven world. As global dynamics evolve rapidly, technology has become the defining language of progress and a central force shaping the future. Sheikh Mohammed: AI Now Mandatory in the UAE Schools
Comments are closed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nearly half of UAE consumers feel AI not meeting their customer service expectations
Nearly half of UAE consumers feel AI not meeting their customer service expectations

Khaleej Times

time8 hours ago

  • Khaleej Times

Nearly half of UAE consumers feel AI not meeting their customer service expectations

More than half (54 per cent) of UAE consumers say that failing to understand emotional cues is more of an AI trait than human, a study showed. According to research by ServiceNow, the AI platform for business transformation, Despite rapid advancements in AI and its widespread use in customer service, UAE consumers overwhelmingly (at least 68 per cent) prefer to interact with people for customer support. ServiceNow's Consumer Voice Report 2025 surveyed 17,000 adults across 13 countries in EMEA — including 1000 in the UAE — and explores consumer expectations when it comes to AI's role in customer experience (CX). Based on the findings of the research, the perceived lack of AI's general emotional intelligence (EQ) is a critical factor in shaping consumer sentiment in this regard. Fifty one per cent feel agents having a limited understanding of context is more likely to be AI; and an equal number say misunderstanding slang, idioms and informal language is more likely AI. Meanwhile, nearly two thirds (64 per cent) of UAE consumers feel repetitive or scripted responses are more of an AI trait. 'The key takeaway for business leaders is that AI can no longer be just another customer service tool – it has to be an essential partner to the human agent. The future of customer relationships now lies at the intersection of AI and emotional intelligence (EQ). Consumers no longer want AI that just gets the job done; they want AI that understands them,' commented William O'Neill, Area VP, UAE at ServiceNow. High stakes, low trust The report also highlights a clear AI trust gap, particularly for urgent or complex requests. UAE consumers embrace AI for speed and convenience in low-risk/routine tasks — 23 per cent of UAE consumers trust an AI chatbot for scheduling a car service appointment and 24 per cent say they are happy to use an AI chatbot for tracking a lost or delayed package. However, when it comes to more sensitive or urgent tasks, consumer confidence in AI drops. Only 13 per cent would trust AI to dispute a suspicious transaction on their bank account with 43 per cent instead preferring to handle this in-person. Similarly, when it comes to troubleshooting a home internet issue, only 20 per cent of consumers across the Emirates are happy to rely on an AI chatbot, with 50 per cent preferring to troubleshoot the issue with someone on the phone. Humans and AI For all the frustrations with AI — almost half (47 per cent) of UAE consumers say their customer service interactions with AI chatbots have not met their expectations — the research does suggest that consumers consider AI as crucial for organizations looking to deliver exceptional customer experiences. For one, in addition to seamless service (90 per cent), quick response times (89 per cent) and accurate information (88 per cent), more than three quarter (76 per cent) of UAE consumers expect the organizations they deal with to provide a good chatbot service. But perhaps more interestingly, 85 per cent of consumers across the Emirates expect the option for self-service problem solving, which does indicate the need for organizations to integrate AI insights and data analysis into service channels to anticipate customer needs before they arise. 'While AI in customer service is currently falling short of consumer expectations, it is not failing. Rather, it is evolving. There is an opportunity for businesses to refine AI by empowering it with the right information, making it more adaptive, emotionally aware, and seamlessly integrated with human agents to take/recommend the next best action and deliver unparalleled customer relationships,' added O'Neill. 'Consumers do not want less AI – they want AI that works smarter. By understanding the biggest pain points, companies can make AI a trusted ally rather than a frustrating barrier.'

Dynatrace drives real-time AI governance, data sovereignty in enterprise landscape
Dynatrace drives real-time AI governance, data sovereignty in enterprise landscape

Tahawul Tech

time11 hours ago

  • Tahawul Tech

Dynatrace drives real-time AI governance, data sovereignty in enterprise landscape

Roman Spitzbart, VP, Solutions Engineers at Dynatrace, shares insights with on how the company is championing real-time observability, secure data governance, and AI-powered automation to support transparency and trust across regulated industries. Interview Excerpts: How is Dynatrace positioning itself to lead conversations around transparent and responsible AI governance in the enterprise space? Responsible AI governance begins with real-time visibility. It's not enough to identify issues after the damage is done. Dynatrace integrates observability into AI applications from day one, ensuring organisations can track, govern, and secure usage as it happens. In a climate where AI adoption often outruns regulatory readiness, Dynatrace helps enterprises maintain control, transparency, and due diligence. How does Dynatrace's Grail engine support traceability and explainability of AI models, particularly in regulated industries like banking and finance? Grail provides deep visibility into every step of a transaction, including the AI layer—whether that's a language model or inference engine. This aligns with our core approach of tracking end-user interactions across complex applications. In regulated industries, the focus is on preventing data intermingling. Dynatrace ensures that all AI interactions are contextually bound to each customer's data, maintaining strict isolation to safeguard compliance. With growing concerns about data privacy and compliance, how does Dynatrace ensure long-term data security and audit-readiness while maintaining rapid querying capabilities? Our unified storage architecture eliminates the need to move data between hot and cold layers, which can compromise access controls. This design keeps data instantly accessible while retaining all security parameters. We rely on hyperscalers like AWS, Azure, and GCP for storage but enforce granular, built-in access controls. Every action is authenticated based on user rights, ensuring audit readiness and robust compliance without performance trade-offs. How is the intersection of observability and AI governance evolving, and what role will Dynatrace play in this future? AI governance is accelerating innovation, and observability must keep pace. Dynatrace is embedding automation and AI observability into the application lifecycle to ensure issues are preemptively managed. Our platform supports secure, cost-efficient deployment of AI systems by ensuring visibility isn't an afterthought. 'We aim to help organisations monitor and optimise AI use at scale—without compromising compliance or budget.' Given Dynatrace's global footprint and access to sector-specific data, how do you ensure data sovereignty while enabling advanced insights like demand forecasting? Data is an enterprise's most valuable resource, but we treat it as our customer's property. Dynatrace does not access or analyse customer data without explicit approval. Any such access follows a strict audit trail and customer-controlled process. Even as a SaaS provider, we do not bypass this. We ensure full data segregation and transparency, reinforcing trust in our role as a custodian, not an owner, of enterprise data.

UAE takes lead in AI-driven digital transformation with Dynatrace's Observability vision
UAE takes lead in AI-driven digital transformation with Dynatrace's Observability vision

Tahawul Tech

time11 hours ago

  • Tahawul Tech

UAE takes lead in AI-driven digital transformation with Dynatrace's Observability vision

Philippe Deblois, Global VP, Solutions Engineering at Dynatrace, discusses the UAE's digital edge, the evolution of observability, and how AI is shaping the future of IT operations. With the UAE fast emerging as a global hub for digital innovation and AI integration, industry leaders are keenly investing in solutions that simplify complexity and drive performance across hybrid cloud environments. Dynatrace, a global leader in observability, is among the few vendors making deep inroads in the region by enabling enterprises to anticipate, automate, and accelerate their digital journeys. In this exclusive conversation, Philippe Deblois, Global Vice President, Solutions Engineering at Dynatrace, shares his top insights with on why the UAE is a magnet for next-gen digital projects, how observability is evolving into a business-critical strategy, and why AI isn't just a feature—but the foundation of the future. Interview Excerpts: Where do you see the UAE in terms of its digital transformation journey? What stands out to you most? The UAE is currently one of the most exciting places for digital transformation. There are numerous ongoing projects, and partnerships such as NVIDIA with G42 and Humane in Saudi Arabia are advancing the concept of AI factories. The Emirates are clearly leading this movement. At Dynatrace, we've seen this as a reason to significantly expand our presence—investing in resources, growing our team by 280%, and launching our own cloud instance in Abu Dhabi. We are the only observability vendor to do so. How is observability evolving from traditional monitoring to a full-scale business solution? Traditional monitoring was reactive—problem occurs, then you respond. Observability, on the other hand, is proactive. It helps prevent issues before they arise by enabling automation, auto-remediation, and performance optimisation. It spans across multi-cloud and hybrid environments and even integrates with AI agents—creating a comprehensive solution that supports modern digital systems. Can you explain observability in simple terms? Observability is essentially about visibility—understanding how systems perform and interact. It's designed to work across all systems, helping identify performance gaps and enabling automated optimisation and protection. What makes Dynatrace's observability platform unique in today's complex IT environments? What sets Dynatrace apart is our all-in-one platform approach. We developed our own backend architecture called Grail, which consolidates logs, traces, metrics, and business/security events into a single data layer. Additionally, AI is built into the core—not added on. 'We use what we call the 'power of three': causal AI, predictive AI, and generative AI. We're also exploring agentic AI for orchestrated communication between AI agents and systems.' Does managing such AI-powered systems require specialised manpower? Are users equipped to handle this? There's a global need to upskill for AI, no doubt. But with Dynatrace, users don't need to be AI experts. Our platform handles the complexity behind the scenes. Users only need to learn how to apply the insights to improve customer or business outcomes. Do you encounter resistance from traditional mindsets when advocating for observability and cloud adoption? Yes, we often do. While innovators grasp the need, some laggards still hesitate. But as businesses move away from three-tier applications toward microservices and cloud-native models, complexity increases. That's when they start seeing value in observability—especially when it helps them reduce friction and gain control during transformation. Which industries in the UAE are adopting observability solutions most rapidly? We've seen strong adoption in government, banking, and aviation. These sectors rely heavily on customer-facing applications, and any disruption directly impacts user experience. Companies are prioritising performance because customers today are vocal—especially on social media—and poor experience can harm reputation fast. What are your top tips for businesses aiming to stay competitive and resilient through observability? First, treat observability as essential—not optional. Modern IT environments are too complex to manage without it. Second, use observability to enhance security—identify vulnerabilities and prioritise fixes. Third, focus on business observability—understanding critical processes like account openings in banking can reveal operational inefficiencies and help improve customer satisfaction.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store