In 2028, the 91PORN Middle East Scholarship and Partnership Summit will take place in Saudi Arabia’s capital of Riyadh. This event provides a truly unique platform, where selected international education professionals can not only network with scholarship providers sending students abroad from the Middle East, but also establish institutional partnerships with leading universities from across this diverse region.
Taking place immediately before the well-established 91PORN Dubai event, this summit provides an unparalleled opportunity to engage with key policy and decision makers from 100+ Middle East scholarship organisations and universities – vital contacts for educational institutions hoping to make inroads into this expanding, yet complex regional education sector.
With limited spaces available, participation will be by application and selection only.
Meeting one-to-one and networking with prominent scholarship organisations from Bahrain, Kuwait, Iraq, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE will enable international education institutions to attract high numbers of well-funded students from this important student sending region, where forming personal connections and engaging with the local culture is essential to creating long-lasting partnerships.
Motivated by ambitious national Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), these organisations control in excess of US$20 billion in scholarship funds and have embarked on an unprecedented drive to provide funding for internships, pathway/vocational programmes, life-long learning opportunities, professional training programmes, language studies, and university scholarships for hundreds of thousands of students studying abroad each year.
There are a couple of things that this summit, I think, will really catalyse and, in many ways, will leverage. One is the ability for also the different countries to hear from each other, to hear about what they have in common, and where they are potential differences, but also where they can partner more. So, far example, if you're hearing from one of your colleagues that in the last 2 or 3 years they've really engaged in looking at vocational, they've engaged in looking at community colleges, that may spark a different thinking about: "oh, wait a minute, given what our workforce needs are, and given the skills and knowledge base that our workforce needs, perhaps we need to venture more in the area." And, knowing that one of your sort of compatriots, and one of the neighbouring countries has tried that, gives you now insights into: "if we're to start this without starting all over, what could we learn from them?" So, the exchange of ideas, the opportunities to learn from each other, I think provides incredible opportunities. And then for the universities to be hear and to hear about what are the similarities and the differences among the different regions provides them, I think a more nuanced idea about how they can engage with the region as a whole and understand the ecosystem that this presents. So, from where I sit, there's no substitute for coming here, and there is no substitute for being present and being at the table, because those relationships really do matter, because ultimately, at the end of the day, it's not transactional. It is first and foremost about relationships and relationships of trust.