Every modern Middle Eastern state strove to create an educational system that promoted economic growth and provided equal educational opportunities. In addition, the Arab states wished to promote cultural unity. In 1957 Egypt, Syria, and Jordan replaced the educational structures that had been established by the colonial powers with a common one consisting of six years of primary school, three years of middle school, and three years of secondary school. Most of the Arab states subsequently followed this pattern, although the length of the school year varied from country to country. The Arab systems also differed in the emphasis they placed on certain subjects, especially religious instruction and Arabic, which occupied an especially prominent place in Saudi Arabian schools.
Turkey, Iran, and all the Arab states except Lebanon had another feature in common: education to the secondary level in these countries was planned and administered by a central ministry. These ministries were generally characterized by administrative weaknesses that severely handicapped the provision of education. University education could also be the responsibility of the ministry or—as in Turkey, Iraq, and Egypt—of a separate body.
Educational planners had usually attained, or surpassed, their quantitative targets for academic schooling. School enrollments and literacy rates rose substantially throughout the Middle East. These gains, however, were at least partly offset by rapidly growing populations. Some governments initiated adult literacy programs, with varying degrees of success.
Planners were less successful in achieving their other goals. Despite great efforts, primary and secondary education everywhere retained certain traditional features. Inequalities remained in such areas as rural and urban access to education and women’s education. Although female school enrollment ratios rose throughout the Middle East, they remained considerably lower than male ratios in every country except Lebanon and Israel, which achieved almost universal elementary literacy. Moreover, at the higher levels of education, the percentage of women students became progressively lower. Many countries, especially Egypt and Tunisia, made strenuous efforts to overcome the economic and cultural factors that limited women’s education, but their experience demonstrated how difficult it was to do so.
Qualitative goals were also difficult to achieve. Financial, human, and physical resources were not able to keep pace with growing enrollments. As a result, the quality of primary and secondary education suffered. Split shifts, crowded classrooms, serious shortages of qualified teachers, and inadequate textbooks and curricula were common problems. The strict examination system used by most countries to determine which students may advance to the next level of education also hurt educational quality. Most experts agreed that the examination system did not provide a valid or reliable indication of student ability. Furthermore, they felt that it reinforced traditional tendencies toward memorization and a rigid classroom culture.
Various innovations were introduced in an attempt to remedy these shortcomings. One of the most important was the nine-year basic education program, which sought to provide all children between the ages of 6 and 15 years with an integrated study program that was practical, did not involve examinations, and prepared students to function in a changing environment. It was widely implemented in Egypt and was introduced in Tunisia and Syria as well.
The Middle Eastern countries were also confronted by serious problems at the university level. Because a degree was widely regarded as a passport to elite status, the demand for higher education grew dramatically. Every government sought to limit the flood of entrants through examinations but managed only to slow, not stop, the growth, which far outpaced projections and resources. To help accommodate the surplus, Egypt and Turkey established programs of “external students” and open universities, which allowed students to take courses at home at their convenience. Every year more and more students of lower-class backgrounds received a university education, but the entrance examinations tended to limit admissions to the most desirable faculties (medicine and engineering) to students with elite backgrounds. The rising number of graduates with unneeded skills in turn aggravated problems caused by lack of coordination between education and employment needs. Except in the Gulf states, which had manpower shortages, governments faced the difficult task of absorbing poorly prepared graduates into the work force while they tried to find qualified managers, technicians and skilled workers.
The development of higher education was adversely affected by political considerations. Most Middle Eastern countries never accepted the principle of academic freedom. Turkey, Lebanon, and Israel were prominent exceptions, but even Lebanese and Turkish universities were subject to political control. The Lebanese civil war and subsequent conflicts created a difficult environment for education at all levels. In Turkey the universities became so politicized in the 1970s that ideology influenced many aspects of university life. After the military coup of 1980, the government proceeded to limit university autonomy and to eliminate political activism. Iran and most Arab countries were ruled by more or less authoritarian regimes that regarded universities as potential sources of opposition. The governments in these countries tried to use schools and colleges to disseminate the prevailing ideology. Hence, scholars often emigrated, and those who remained at home were compelled to teach and to conduct research in ways that did not create difficulties.
Efforts to increase vocational and technical training were not very successful, because of the continuing appeal of white-collar careers. In Egypt the government’s determined attempt to channel students into technical and vocational schools yielded mixed results. Enrollments did increase, but the quality and relevance of such education was questioned as authorities considered the costs involved in purchasing necessary expensive equipment and in training and retaining qualified teachers, whose skills enabled them to obtain more remunerative positions in industry. The same difficulties prevailed in the other Middle Eastern countries, though Turkey established—with World Bank support—a network of modern vocational schools.
Technical training in the agricultural sector was also deficient. There was a shortage of qualified extension agents and other specialists everywhere. Moreover, the bias toward academics meant that rural education tended to be neglected, even though the need for agricultural modernization in national development required that peasants acquire a wide range of skills. Israel was one country where rural education received the attention that it deserved. The Islamic revival
The rapid expansion of modern education and knowledge produced results that were not welcomed everywhere. Islam remained, in all societies, a powerful force—one nurtured by traditional factors and by religious education, which continued to be widely offered in one form or another. Believing that traditional Islamic values had been eroded by Western knowledge based on erroneous assumptions, numerous Islamic scholars called for the creation and diffusion of knowledge within an Islamic framework. The Iranian Revolution and the rise of Islamic fundamentalist movements demonstrated the power of this appeal. Religiously based polities like Saudi Arabia and Iran emphasized Islamic teachings and values in all schools and colleges, but many other states were providing more religious education than previously. Migration and the brain drain
Educational systems were also affected by the widespread international migration of professionals and skilled workers that characterized the Middle East. The West siphoned off a significant percentage of the skilled manpower from Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Egypt, and Jordan. Large numbers of educated persons migrated from Turkey, Lebanon, Syria, and especially Egypt and Jordan to the oil-rich states, particularly Bahrain, Kuwait, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, Algeria, and the United Arab Emirates, all of which faced severe manpower shortages. This flow aggravated shortages of skilled workers in many of the exporting countries, especially Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon.