
Saudi Arabia and Arbisoft Partner on Digital Education
Saudi Arabia just took a major step toward transforming education for millions of students. A new partnership will bring cutting-edge digital learning platforms to classrooms across the Kingdom.
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Saudi Arabia's push to modernize education just gained a powerful ally in the fight to prepare students for tomorrow's jobs.
Tech company Arbisoft and Saudi education leader Thakaat signed a partnership agreement at a major education conference in Riyadh this month. The collaboration will bring open-source digital learning platforms to schools and training centers across the Kingdom, supporting Saudi Vision 2030's goal of building world-class education infrastructure.
The deal centers on Edly, Arbisoft's flexible learning platform that institutions can customize to fit their needs. Unlike rigid commercial systems, the open-source approach lets Saudi educators build learning experiences tailored to local priorities while keeping pace with global standards.
Arbisoft brings nearly two decades of experience building education technology for clients worldwide, with a team of over 800 professionals. Thakaat contributes deep knowledge of Saudi Arabia's education landscape and the connections needed to implement changes that actually stick.
The partnership goes beyond just installing new software. Plans include developing training programs for teachers and initiatives designed to strengthen workforce readiness, ensuring students graduate with skills employers actually need.

"By combining global engineering excellence with deep local expertise, we aim to help build resilient digital learning infrastructures that empower educators, nurture gifted learners, and strengthen the Kingdom's future workforce," said Yasser Bashir, Arbisoft's CEO.
The Ripple Effect
This agreement signals how seriously Saudi Arabia takes its commitment to education transformation. When a country invests in scalable, modern learning tools, the benefits multiply across generations.
Students gain access to personalized learning experiences that adapt to their pace and style. Teachers get tools that free them from administrative burdens so they can focus on actually teaching. And employers eventually benefit from graduates who enter the workforce ready to contribute from day one.
The open-source foundation matters too. Rather than locking Saudi institutions into proprietary systems controlled by foreign companies, this approach gives the Kingdom control over its own educational future while maintaining the flexibility to innovate.
Both organizations will now develop pilot programs to test ideas before scaling them nationwide, ensuring the partnership delivers real results rather than just good intentions.
For a region racing to diversify its economy beyond oil, this kind of education infrastructure investment represents the long game paying off.
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Based on reporting by Regional: saudi arabia development (SA)
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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