[5] Several prestigious universities from around the world have satellite campuses in the country in Education City and within the suburbs of the capital Doha.
[9] At the time RAND's study was conducted, over 100,000 students were served by the Qatari education system; two-thirds of whom attended government-operated schools.
[9] RAND also proposed numerous reforms to the system to the Qatari government, with an emphasis on improving the curricula.
[9] An assessment test published in 2008 revealed that only a small portion of students were able to meet the new curriculum standards.
[13] Furthermore, the Qatar National Vision 2030 sets a number of objectives for the country's education system.
[13] In 2021 Qatar was one of the first in groups of IT Technology sharetesting to emphasize and use debate methods with Textbook Style performances over its media platform directly into homes.
It was hoped using the new technology leadership for putting it out there would inspire newer forms of radical training and help pressure improvements.
Qatar in 2021 signaled it would stop the practice immediately after its first debate ended with a complete withdraw after it was entered into records.
This type of education was typically completed by the age of 10, whereupon the child's family would celebrate al khatma, or the end of memorizing the Quran.
Mahmud Shukri Al-Alusi, an Islamic scholar, stated that between 1878 and 1913, there were around 20 kuttabs, 30 madrasahs and 400 mosques in the al-Hasa region, which included Qatar.
Mosques, in addition to serving as places of prayer, were also regarded as educational facilities as they provided Muslims with religious instruction and advice.
The first type of kuttab taught only the Quran and basic religious principles and were very wide spread in both rural and urban areas.
The country's most reputable madrasa in the early 20th century, Al-Madrasa al-Sheikh Muhammad Abdulaziz Al-Ma'na, was established in 1918 by a Bahraini sheikh.
[20] The madrasa produced some of the country's most highly skilled individuals, including a number of poets and government officials.
[24] The syllabus encompassed a broad range of topics, including religious education, geography, English, arithmetic and grammar.
[25] The first formal girls' school opened its doors in the 1950s in Doha[26] and the first female teacher and Principal was Amina Mahmoud Al-Jaidah.
[28] A policy instated by the Ministry of Education during the 1950s limited the number of schools in order to balance the student-to-teacher ratio.
Additionally, they provided teachers with numerous incentives, such as furnished accommodation and annual round-trip tickets.
[33] In the 1970s, the government initiated a policy of re-locating village inhabitants to larger nearby settlements where they then established co-educational primary and secondary schools.
First ever expatriate workers include from Egypt, Palestine, Iran & Pakistan later joined by Indians and Bangladeshis in the 1960s and 1970s.
Onward 1990s, workers from Philippines, Nepal and Sri Lanka added in significant numbers in Qatar society.
It currently has eight colleges, including Education, Business and Economics, Arts and Sciences, Engineering, Sharia, Pharmacy, Law, and Medicine.
The Qatari government has taken a unique approach to education through AL-Bairaq, an outreach program targeting high school students which focuses on a curriculum that is based on STEM fields.
The idea behind AL-Bairaq is to offer high school students the opportunity to connect with the research environment in the Center for Advanced Materials (CAM) at Qatar University.