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Public education in Saudi Arabia—from primary education through college—is open to every Saudi citizen. Education is the second-largest sector of government spending in Saudi Arabia. [7] Saudi Arabia spends 8.8% of its gross domestic product on education, which is nearly double the global average of 4.6%. [8]
Bangladesh International School, English Section, Riyadh was established in 1990 for students of the Bangladeshi community in Riyadh. It was originally known as the Bangladesh Embassy School due to its administration by the Bangladeshi Embassy in Riyadh. It transitioned to being led by a Board of Directors elected by students' parents. [2]
Saudi Kuttab (elementary school) teaching. In 1930s, formal primary education began in Saudi Arabia. [1] In 1945, King Abdulaziz bin Abdelrahman Al-Saud, the country's founder, had initiated an extensive program to establish schools in the kingdom. [1] In 1954, the Ministry of Education was established. [1]
A significant number of U.S. workers are English teachers. [citation needed] Additionally Egyptians have long migrated to Saudi Arabia to take up professional jobs such as doctors, nurses, teachers and engineers, as have Filipinos to work in the health, oil and manufacturing sectors. [31]
More than two million are in Saudi Arabia. [46] The United Arab Emirates is home to 706,000. [47] Oman has about 680,242 Bangladeshis as of 2018. [48] There is a Bangladeshi school in the city of Muscat, in Oman, called Bangladesh School Muscat. [citation needed] Qatar has about 400,000 Bangladeshis as of 2019. [49]
The Education and Training Evaluation Commission (ETEC) (Arabic: هيئة تقويم التعليم والتدريب), formerly known as the Education Evaluation Authority, [1] is a government organization responsible for planning, evaluation, assessment, and accreditation of educational and training systems in Saudi Arabia in coordination with the Ministry of Education.
In 1328 AH / 1908 AD, an industrial school was opened in Makkah Al-Mukarramah, to which teachers were sent from Istanbul. One of the most important government schools that combined public education and technical education during the unification period of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia was the Rasheediyya School, which was established between 1301 ...
The school was established on 1 January 1987. H. E. Hedayet Ahmed, then Ambassador of Bangladesh, who proposed the school as a part of the education and cultural wing of the Bangladesh Embassy in Saudi Arabia. The school is run by a school management committee, which is elected by the school parents.