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PRIVACY
Opinion

What we could learn from higher education in Egypt

Nile University is an exemplar for entrepreneurial learning

Professor Dylan Jones-Evans in Egypt.

Last week, I was honoured to be an external consultant to the Egypt-OECD country programme which aims to be a key source of information, practices and guidance for the successful design and implementation of structural reforms to address Egypt’s main economic challenges.

My focus was specifically on aligning higher education with labour market needs and I had an intensive five days of meetings with government ministries, universities, and businesses to discuss a range of subjects including the integration of high-demand skills into study programmes, collaboration with employers in the design and delivery of the educational offer, and support for teaching staff to keep abreast with key developments in related industries.

But the learning process was not only one way, and it was an eye-opening experience to be find out more about what was happening within the Egyptian economy and how universities were supporting the process of economic transformation.

Certainly, Egypt has many challenges and analysts have noted that the economy is currently experiencing some turbulence with a very uncertain outlook. Immediate pressures on the economy including a substantial cost of living crisis that is being fed by an inflation rate that is almost 33% and a recent halving of the value of the Egyptian pound against the dollar.

Yet, despite this and having reflected on some of the meetings since I arrived back in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, there are also several developments which are worth examining as being innovative in themselves and where our own higher education sector could learn some lessons.

The scale of the higher education sector is something that I did not expect at all. For example, we visited Cairo University to meet with their senior team and were informed that it had over 250,000 students, equivalent to the entire population of Swansea. In contrast, there are 149,045 students in the entire Welsh higher education sector.

Whilst this was impressive, what was mind-blowing especially for someone with my academic background was that every single one of these students must undertake a one credit module in entrepreneurship. In other words, hundreds of thousands of young people studying at the largest university in Egypt will have some exposure to enterprise during their studies over the next few years.

Compare this with universities in Wales where, despite having far lower number of students, there remains a reluctance to embrace entrepreneurship within most institutions and, from my experience, almost no desire to integrate it into the curriculum.