Go Back

Hyper-Hybrid Education 

In Focus
NAME:Abdullatif Alshamsi  
COMPANY:Higher Colleges of Technology
POSITION:President & CEO
LOCATION:Dubai, UAE
By embedding professional certifications into academic courses and incubating students’ business ideas, Higher Colleges of Technology President and CEO Abdullatif Alshamsi is pushing the boundaries of academia.   

Abdullatif Alshamsi is an academic who always finds himself pushing against the boundaries created by academia. As President and CEO of the United Arab Emirates government’s Higher Colleges of Technology (HCT), he has overhauled the way students study, shifting the focus from learning for its own sake toward preparing students for the labor market or to start their own businesses.

“Today, HCT is no longer just an academic institution,” he says. “It has established a free zone – a zone for creative ideas that can be converted into business opportunities.”

Among the biggest changes in the seven years since Alshamsi joined HCT, which has some 23,000 students across 16 campuses, is that every academic degree is now coupled with a mandatory professional certification.

Those studying to be chartered accountants, for example, must complete a section of modules that involve work experience in the industry in order to obtain their degrees. Engineers are required to complete resume-boosting health and safety courses, while finance students complete a course at the Project Management Institute.

We want to make sure our graduates are the number one choice for the labor market.

“Those certifications have provided us with a quality assurance for every program being offered, guaranteeing that it meets the skills and competencies required in that specific specialization in the business sector,” Alshamsi says.

“We want to make sure our graduates are the number one choice for the labor market, compared to other academic institutions. How do we guarantee that? By having the academic credential in addition to the professional credential.”

Graduating Businesses

Another key change at HCT in recent years has been the introduction of an incubator program for students to start their own businesses. So far, the program has fostered 138 companies, 40 of which are already fully in operation. About 600 jobs have been created as a result.

“We are not only in the business of graduating students with a degree, we have also introduced the concept of graduating companies,” Alshamsi says. For a company to “graduate”, it must have a trade license, board members and be generating revenue.

We are not only in the business of graduating students with a degree, we have also introduced the concept of graduating companies.

Alshamsi has worked in academia for more than 25 years, publishing dozens of research papers and speaking regularly at conferences about his approach to education, change management and the use of technology in education.

The COVID-19 pandemic provided a huge boost to his ambitions of increasing the number of virtual classrooms at HCT. He has introduced a “hybrid” education system, mixing online and on-campus learning, and he is building on that with a “hyper-hybrid” system that allows students to meet and share ideas on campus outside of a traditional lecture or seminar.


“The HCT is at the forefront of technological innovation and is leading the way toward a learner-centric approach. We’re excited to align ourselves to HCT’s mission and see where our partnership takes us.” – Anthony Lorin, President, International, McGraw Hill

Advertisement

“With the hybrid model, you reduce the footprint of students on campus, so you increase your capacity to bring more students onboard but with less cost, and yet not at the expense of the learning outcomes,” Alshamsi says.

“Now we’re going beyond the hybrid. We need students to come to campus for social networking, for engagement, and this is where all the ideas come together for innovation, for entrepreneurship and so on.

“So maybe we don’t need as many physical classrooms, but the campus should become more of an open lab space, rather than one with traditional classrooms or traditional laboratories.”

On-the-ground Leadership

As a leader, Alshamsi follows three key rules. The first is that it is imperative to adopt a clear vision, and to ensure that everyone in your organization understands it and is on board. “Your vision has to cascade down to every single person,” he says.

The next rule is to continuously hire people who are smarter than you. “You need people smarter than yourself to help you execute this vision and make it happen, and come up with all these creative ideas,” he explains.

Maybe we don’t need as many physical classrooms, but the campus should become more of an open lab space.

“Number three, do not work in an ivory tower type of office; be on the ground,” he says. “Being the President and CEO, I also teach. I’m a teacher, and I commit to teaching.”

Teaching ensures Alshamsi hears about issues and challenges that need to be addressed from the very people grappling with them. Despite his strong belief in the value of online learning, Alshamsi, like any old-school academic, understands how essential it is to exchange ideas in person.

Back to top
SPOTLIGHTS ON LEADERS