One of the most exciting activities that took place at the World Economic
Forum that is currently being held in Davos was the United Arab Emirates'
presentation about the future which is being manufactured in the world's
laboratories. It differed from the wars and conflicts in our region that were
being discussed in other halls in the same building.
During the next four years, people will be able to detect any signs of a
cancerous tumour through a saliva test that costs twenty dollars. The report
reviewed the progress made in the field of eliminating blindness. In the
middle of the century, science will have achieved its ambition through
laboratory experiments that are currently being held regarding the fashioning
of the human race including the addition of muscles, increasing height and
delaying ageing. There are clinical trials that are taking place today and
their results will decide the future of the next few years. One of these
trials is the transfer of blood from those who are under the age of 25 to
those over 35 to see the improvements of important cells.
I read the presentation that Mohammed bin Abdullah Al Gergawi and his team
made at the forum and it reflects our desire to establish a place for us in
the new world through working with major scientific and research institutions
in the world. He delivered an optimistic presentation about the future that
various organisations participated in with things that they have produced or
that they are working on producing. Some of these products include
three-dimensional printing, solar aeroplanes and ultrafast Hyperloop trains
have already been tested.
What is going on in the kitchen of today for tomorrow shows the frightening
difference between communities that are planning and working to progress, and
those that are still living in the past and are refusing to open up to the
world which will bury us in its products and with the speed of its changes.
The report was prepared by a prominent group of experts and specialists on the
future of the world which includes the largest group of people generating
ideas and initiatives related to the future in light of the fourth industrial
revolution, Al Gergawi says. 21 specialists from around the world contributed
to this report on strategic sectors such as energy, health and education.
''The report announces 112 predictions that we will see in the next forty
years such as floating farms, body parts that are printed by 3D printers, the
challenges of climate change and classrooms in the virtual world.''
In my view, making progress in educational technology is most important for us
in order to shorten the time that it will take for us to catch up with the
world as we are riding the last carriage of the progression train. Although
the report did not elaborate enough to understand modern educational
techniques, it encourages us to make a new cognitive transformation.
Having virtual schools and classrooms, using virtual reality in general to
teach science and the willingness of the best scientific universities in the
world to make part of their research and curriculum available to anyone who
wants it, providing additional teaching methods and focussing on the four most
important educational areas; science, technology, engineering and mathematics
will help us achieve this. Scientific developments in education will help us
to catch up as the concept of education for adults and children is changing
today. Developments in the sciences are the achievements of the human mind
which differentiates between one nation and another.
Al Rashed is the general manager of Al -Arabiya television. He is also the
former editor-in-chief of Asharq Al- Awsat, and the leading Arabic weekly
magazine, Al Majalla. He is also a senior Columnist in the daily newspapers of
Al Madina and Al Bilad. He is a US post-graduate degree in mass
communications. He has been a guest on many TV current affairs programs. He is
currently based in Dubai.