Breakfast Before the MOOC. By Thomas L. Friedman.
Breakfast Before the MOOC. By Thomas L. Friedman. New York Times, February 18, 2014.
Friedman:
Beginning
March 2, Prof. Hossam Haick, will teach the first ever massive open online
course, or MOOC, on nanotechnology in Arabic. What’s more interesting, though,
he explained to me the other day over breakfast is some of the curious email
he’s received from students registering for his MOOC from all over the Arab
world. Their questions include: Are you a real person? Are you really an Arab,
or are you an Israeli Jew speaking Arabic, pretending to be an Arab? That’s
because Haick is an Israeli Arab from Nazareth and will be teaching this course
from his home university, the Technion, Israel’s premier science and technology
institute, and the place we were having breakfast was Tel Aviv.
His
course is entitled Nanotechnology and Nanosensors and is designed for anyone
interested in learning about Haick’s specialty: “novel sensing tools that make
use of nanotechnology to screen, detect, and monitor various events in either
our personal or professional life.” The course includes 10 classes of 3 to 4
short lecture videos — in Arabic and English — and anyone with an Internet
connection can tune in and participate for free in the weekly quizzes, forum
activities and do a final project.
If you
had any doubts about the hunger for education in the Middle East today, Haick’s
MOOC will dispel them. So far, there are about 4,800 registrations for the
Arabic version, including students from Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Jordan,
Iraq, Kuwait, Algeria, Morocco, Sudan, Tunisia, Yemen, the United Arab Emirates
and the West Bank. Iranians are signing up for the English version. Because the
registration is through the Coursera MOOC website, some registrants initially
don’t realize the course is being taught by an Israeli Arab scientist at the
Technion, said Haick, and when they do, some professors and students
“unregister.” But most others are sticking with it. (MOOC’s have just started
to emerge in the Arab world via Coursera, edX, Edraak, Rwaq, SkillAcademy and
MenaVersity — some with original content, much still translated.)
Asked
why he thought the course was attracting so much interest in the neighborhood,
Haick said: “Because nanotechnology and nanosensors are perceived as
futuristic, and people are curious to understand what the future looks like.”
And because nanotechnology “is so cross- and multi-disciplinary. ... It offers
a large diversity of research opportunities.”
Haick,
38, whose Ph.D. is from the Technion, where his father also graduated, is a
science prodigy. He and the Technion already have a start-up together,
developing what he calls “an electronic nose” — a sensory array that mimics the
way a dog’s nose works to detect what Haick and his team have proved to be
unique markers in exhaled breath that reveal different cancers in the body. In
between that and teaching chemical engineering, the Technion’s president,
Peretz Lavie, suggested that Haick lead the school into the land of MOOCs.
Lavie,
Haick explained, “thinks there is a high need to bring science beyond the
boundaries between countries. He told me there is something called a ‘MOOC.’ I
did not know what is a MOOC. He said it is a course that can be given to
thousands of people over the Web. And he asked if I can give the first MOOC
from the Technion — in Arabic.”
The
Technion is funding the project, which took nine months to prepare, and Haick
is donating the lectures. Some 19 percent of the Technion’s students today are
Israeli Arabs, up from 9 percent 12 years ago. Haick says he always tells
people, “If the Middle East was like the Technion, we would already have peace.
In the pure academy, you feel totally equal with every person. And you are
appreciated based on your excellence.” He adds without meaning to boast, “I
have young people who tell me from the Arab world: ‘You have become our role
model. Please let us know the ingredients of how we become like you.’”
I know
what some readers are thinking: nice bit of Israeli propaganda, now could you
please go back to writing about Israel’s ugly West Bank occupation. No. This
story is a useful reminder that Israel is a country, not just a conflict, and,
as a country, it’s still a work in progress. It has its lows, like the
occupation and economic discrimination against Israeli Arabs, and its highs,
like the collaboration between Haick and the Technion, which is providing a
tool for those in the Arabic-speaking world eager to grasp the new technologies
reshaping the global economy. Those, like members of the B.D.S. — boycott,
divestiture, sanctions — movement who treat Israel as if it is only the sum of
how it deals with the West Bank and therefore deserves to be delegitimized as a
state, would do well to reflect on some of these complexities.
For me,
though, Haick’s MOOC is also a reminder of what an utter waste of money and
human talent has been the Arab-Israeli conflict. Look how eager all these young
Arabs and Persians are for the tools and resources to realize their full
potential, wherever they can find that learning. Arab dictators so
underestimated their people for so long. That’s what fueled the Arab awakening.
It makes you weep for the wasted generations and pray this will be the last of
them.