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An Experience Report of Executive-Level Artificial Intelligence Education in the United Arab Emirates

arXiv ·

This paper presents an experience report on teaching an AI course to business executives in the UAE. The course focuses on enabling students to understand how to incorporate AI into existing business processes, rather than focusing only on theoretical and technical aspects. The paper discusses the course overview, curriculum, teaching methods, and reflections on teaching adult learners in the UAE.

Levelling up AI understanding

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI launched its Executive Program, a hybrid course for government and industry leaders to promote greater engagement with AI. The program's first session, led by MBZUAI President Eric Xing, covered the history and future of AI and machine learning. It aims to accelerate AI development across various sectors in the UAE, focusing on efficiency, cost savings, and environmental impact reduction. Why it matters: This initiative signals the UAE's commitment to fostering AI literacy and driving AI adoption across key sectors, aligning with national economic development plans.

How MBZUAI is boosting executive leadership

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI's executive programs (MEP and MEP-A) have trained nearly 240 senior leaders from the UAE's public and private sectors to implement AI solutions. Cohort six of the MEP begins in April, while the MEP-A will commence later in the year. The programs, taught by instructors from MBZUAI, UC Berkeley, Oxford, Harvard, and MIT, cover AI fundamentals, industry applications, strategy, policymaking, and ethics. Why it matters: These programs aim to empower leaders to contribute to the UAE's growing AI ecosystem and promote ethically-rooted innovation, aligning with the UAE's national AI strategy.

AI strategy for CEOs: Where to lead, lag, or exit - PwC

Bahrain AI ·

PwC has published a report offering strategic guidance to CEOs on navigating the landscape of artificial intelligence. The report likely outlines frameworks for determining where companies should proactively invest and innovate ('lead'), adopt standard industry practices ('lag'), or deprioritize ('exit') specific AI initiatives. It probably addresses critical aspects such as resource allocation, risk management, and competitive differentiation through AI adoption. Why it matters: This strategic counsel can assist businesses in the Middle East in formulating robust AI strategies, optimizing their investments, and enhancing their market competitiveness.