Key Findings from the Scopus-Indexed Study on UAE Mass Communication Students
The recent Scopus-indexed study published in the Open Journal of Communication and Media Technologies provides a comprehensive assessment of artificial intelligence (AI) literacy among undergraduate mass communication students in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Titled "AI Literacy in Media Education: A Comparative Study of Mass Communication Students in the UAE and Pakistan," it surveyed 297 UAE students across disciplines like journalism, public relations, new media, radio and television production, integrated marketing communications, and general mass communication programs at government, semi-government, and private universities.
Artificial intelligence literacy, defined here as the ability to understand, use, evaluate, and critically assess AI technologies in media contexts (encompassing functional, conceptual, evaluative, and critical dimensions), showed moderate to high levels among UAE participants. Mean scores hovered around 2.77 to 2.84 on a 4-point Likert scale, indicating solid foundational knowledge despite no statistically significant differences from Pakistani counterparts in overall literacy. However, UAE students outperformed in practical application intensity (mean 3.02 vs. 2.76), perceived skills for media tasks (2.68 vs. 2.51), usage rates in activities like news writing and video editing, and satisfaction levels (4.43 vs. 4.12).
Popular tools included ChatGPT (93.2% usage), QuillBot (nearly 50%), and Google Gemini, reflecting seamless integration into daily academic workflows. Notably, 68.9% of non-users were Pakistani, with UAE non-users citing concerns like data distrust (26.3%) and lack of training.
Methodology Behind Measuring AI Literacy in UAE Contexts
The quantitative cross-sectional survey, conducted from September to October 2024 via Google Forms, targeted undergraduates with demographics mirroring UAE higher education: balanced gender (50.2% male), ages 18-25 dominant (79.8%), and even distribution across years. Reliability was high (Cronbach's alpha 0.973 overall), using an adapted AI literacy scale intersecting with digital, information, and media literacies.
Data analysis via SPSS employed t-tests and chi-square tests, confirming hypotheses on UAE advantages in adoption (p=0.001) and skills (p=0.002). No overall literacy gap suggests global tools like ChatGPT democratize knowledge, but UAE's superior infrastructure—99% internet penetration and 325 Mbps speeds—enables deeper engagement. This positions UAE media programs ahead, aligning with national visions for tech-savvy graduates.
UAE's Superior AI Adoption: Infrastructure and Policy Advantages
UAE students' edge stems from robust digital ecosystems and proactive policies. Unlike Pakistan's 45.7% penetration and slower speeds, UAE's high-speed access facilitates tools like AI-driven content generators. Government-backed initiatives, including the UAE National AI Strategy 2031, prioritize AI in education, fostering environments where 93% use ChatGPT for tasks from paraphrasing to analytics.
Perceived skills were strongest in PR/advertising planning and web traffic analysis, with significant p-values <0.01, underscoring AI's role in real-world media production. Positive attitudes (78.8%) and high satisfaction highlight readiness, though 11.4% non-users signal training gaps even here.
For aspiring media professionals, explore higher ed jobs in UAE universities integrating AI, or check UAE academic opportunities.
AI Literacy Dimensions: Strengths and Gaps Among UAE Students
- Functional Literacy (using AI tools): Mean 2.77; excels in daily tasks like editing.
- Conceptual Literacy (AI understanding): Highest at 2.84; grasp of machine learning basics.
- Evaluative Literacy (tool selection): 2.82; adept at choosing for media needs.
- Critical Literacy (ethics/impact): 2.84; awareness of bias but room for deeper debate.
These scores reveal balanced proficiency, yet critical areas like ethical AI in journalism warrant enhancement to combat misinformation.
Photo by Shashank Raghuvanshi on Unsplash
UAE Universities Leading AI Integration in Mass Communication
Zayed University's College of Communication and Media Sciences (CCMS) pioneers with AI faculty certifications and labs, embedding tools in curricula for journalism and PR. Ajman University hosted AI content workshops, while American University in Dubai (AUD) launches AI-business hybrids influencing media majors.
University of Sharjah and Middlesex Dubai incorporate AI ethics in media studies, aligning with UAE AI Strategy 2031. These efforts boost skills, as study shows UAE students 20-30% more proficient in AI-aided production.
National AI Strategy: Transforming UAE Media Education Landscape
The UAE's AI 2031 blueprint mandates integration across higher education, with MoE initiatives training 1,000+ teachers and funding AI labs. Media programs benefit via partnerships like MBZUAI collaborations, producing graduates for AI-powered outlets like Emirates News Agency.
Outcomes: Enhanced content creation (e.g., AI video editing up 25% usage), analytics, and ethical reporting. Yet, study notes ethical gaps, urging modules on AI bias in Arab media contexts.
Gulf News on UAE AI in HEChallenges Persisting in UAE Media Programs Despite High Literacy
While ahead, 31% of non-users cite training deficits and ethical distrust. Broader issues: Faculty upskilling lags, curriculum silos limit interdisciplinary AI-media fusion, and over-reliance risks creativity dilution. Study limitations highlight self-report bias and need for qualitative depth.
Stakeholders like ZU faculty advocate hybrid models blending AI with human insight for authentic journalism.
Curriculum Reforms and Recommendations for UAE Institutions
Authors recommend mandatory AI modules: hands-on ChatGPT for newsrooms, ethics seminars, faculty bootcamps. UAE unis like ZU lead with AI certificates; scale via labs and industry ties (e.g., Dubai Media Incubator).
- Step 1: Audit curricula for AI gaps.
- Step 2: Train faculty (e.g., ZU's program).
- Step 3: Pilot AI projects in capstones.
- Step 4: Ethical frameworks for media AI.
Link to career advice for AI-savvy media grads.
Photo by Ashutosh Oza on Unsplash
Stakeholder Perspectives: Faculty, Students, and Industry Views
UAE media educators praise infrastructure but stress ethics; students value productivity gains (e.g., 50% faster research). Industry (e.g., UAE Media Council) seeks AI-literate hires for automated journalism. Balanced views: AI augments, doesn't replace creativity.
Future Outlook: AI's Evolving Role in UAE Media Education
Projections: By 2031, 100% AI-integrated media degrees, VR journalism sims, predictive analytics courses. Challenges like job displacement countered by upskilling. UAE's lead positions it as MENA AI-media hub, with studies like this guiding evidence-based reforms.
Explore rate my professor for AI-forward UAE faculty, higher ed jobs in media tech, or career advice for thriving in AI-era media.
