UN Branch Educating Students in Arab States with Leading Wolfram
Research Technology
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) has
chosen Mathematica technology to help improve programs in
science and technology in the Arab states. The UNESCO Cairo Office
(UCO) signed a comprehensive agreement for the use of all Wolfram
Research products. The software is being used to establish
a Mathematica demonstration and training center for the 17 Arab
states covered by the UCO.
The UCO is a regional office for science, technology, and informatics for the
Arab states. Dr. Tarek Shawki, regional advisor for Communications and
Information at the UCO, says that he decided to focus on promoting the use of
Mathematica because "it offers a wonderful system for handling
both numerical and symbolic mathematics. Mathematica is an
excellent tool for both students and teachers alike. It provides a
wealth of features that are ideal for students' visualization and
exploration of mathematical concepts, while providing the teachers
with an excellent array of tools to make teaching mathematics a lot
more effective and fun. Furthermore, extensions like
webMathematica introduce an exciting tool for distance
education--a tool that helps students learn complex mathematics
concepts."
Shawki has used Mathematica extensively in his own work and was
appointed as regional advisor on the strength of his technical
expertise. Educated at Cairo University in Egypt and Brown University
in Rhode Island, USA, Shawki spent 13 years as a researcher and
professor of theoretical and applied mechanics at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA, one of the top engineering schools
in the world. His leadership is now paramount to the Arab region in
modernizing university education in basic and engineering sciences,
and he feels strongly that Mathematica is integral to this
effort.
In September 2003, Shawki demonstrated Mathematica technology
before attendees of the UNESCO Communications and Information sector
retreat in Paris, France. His presentation emphasized to the UNESCO
board the importance of Mathematica as an educational
tool. Shawki says that the sector specialists were most impressed by
the "numerical, symbolic, and visualization aspects of
Mathematica. They were pleased to learn about the
Teacher's Edition of
Mathematica, which offers great potential for UNESCO to help improve the
teaching of mathematics in both schools and colleges."
The software and demonstration center will enable the UCO to introduce
Arab leaders to Mathematica and its many applications for
university and high school education. Ministers of technology and
education throughout the Arab states will be able to visit
the Mathematica center at the UCO offices in Cairo and learn
how they can use the technology to build and improve curricula in
their own countries. As the center becomes more established, it will
also serve as a hub for certified Mathematica training.
The UCO's new demonstration and training center is not the
only Mathematica technology initiative currently underway in
the Arab Gulf region. The 2004 Mathematica Gulf Conference, the
first of its kind in the Arabian Peninsula, was held in Muscat,
Oman, in January 2004.
More information about the Mathematica Gulf
Conference is available.
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