E-Learning in Saudi Arabia Shifts from Planning to Execution under Pandemic

Part of the activities of the first days of school in a school in Madinah, Saudi Arabia (SPA)
Part of the activities of the first days of school in a school in Madinah, Saudi Arabia (SPA)
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E-Learning in Saudi Arabia Shifts from Planning to Execution under Pandemic

Part of the activities of the first days of school in a school in Madinah, Saudi Arabia (SPA)
Part of the activities of the first days of school in a school in Madinah, Saudi Arabia (SPA)

At the start, e-learning in Saudi Arabia was considered the future of education in the Kingdom. However, the coronavirus pandemic made studying online a vital aspect of learning today.

The option of distance learning is now available for primary courses that will launch this school year online before students go back to attending their classes in person.

While many countries struggled with the repercussions of the pandemic in the past academic year, Saudi Arabia fell back on all modern tech means available and the Kingdom’s remote education infrastructure to allow its students to keep learning.

This prompted the Kingdom’s remarkable success in overcoming education challenges posed by the pandemic.

Muhammad Al-Hejailan, associate professor of information technology and e-learning management at King Saud University in Riyadh, explains that the Education Ministry’s response to activating e-learning was swift and efficient.

The ministry, according to Al-Hejailan, launched its e-learning department in alignment with the Kingdom’s national vision for transformation, dubbed “Vision 2030.” The vision promotes across-the-board digital transformation in Saudi Arabia.

“This move stemmed from Vision 2030,” Al-Hejailan told Asharq Al-Awsat, adding that the ministry’s administrative structure helped in planning and supporting the success of quality digital progress.

Despite all its negative fall-out, the coronavirus pandemic did manage to speed up digital transformation in the education sector.

“The pandemic abridged a multi-step process into a short step,” said Al-Hejailan, considering the matter positive for any future plans.

Al-Hejailan highlighted that high-quality Saudi human resources, compared to other countries, prompted this digital movement’s success.

Previous scholarship programs have created great potential in areas that help e-learning, from both the technical and educational aspects, added the academic.

Saleh Al-Atiwi, a professor of educational technology and software project management at King Saud University in Riyadh, confirmed that Saudi Arabia is one of the leading countries to apply information and communication technology in all fields, including diverse learning environments.



Eel-eating Japan Opposes EU Call for More Protection

People on bicycles cross a street under the hot sun in Tokyo on June 20, 2025. (Photo by Kazuhiro NOGI / AFP)
People on bicycles cross a street under the hot sun in Tokyo on June 20, 2025. (Photo by Kazuhiro NOGI / AFP)
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Eel-eating Japan Opposes EU Call for More Protection

People on bicycles cross a street under the hot sun in Tokyo on June 20, 2025. (Photo by Kazuhiro NOGI / AFP)
People on bicycles cross a street under the hot sun in Tokyo on June 20, 2025. (Photo by Kazuhiro NOGI / AFP)

Japan's agriculture minister said Friday the country would oppose any call by the European Union to add eels to an endangered species list that would limit trade in them.

Eel is eaten worldwide but is particularly popular in Japan, where it is called "unagi" and traditionally served grilled after being covered in a sticky-sweet sauce.

Minister Shinjiro Koizumi told reporters that the country carefully manages stock levels of the Japanese eel in cooperation with neighboring China, Taiwan and South Korea.

"There is a sufficient population, and it faces no extinction risk due to international trade," AFP quoted him as saying.

Japanese media have reported that the EU could soon propose that all eel species be added to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) which limits trade of protected animals.

There are 19 species and subspecies of eel, many of them now threatened due to a range of factors including pollution and overfishing.

In 2014, the Japanese eel was listed as endangered, but not critically endangered, by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, which cited factors including habitat loss, overfishing, pollution and migration barriers.

Protecting the animal is complicated by their complex life cycle, which unfolds over a vast area, and the many unknowns about how they reproduce.