CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: DR. KHALID BIN MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Doha Today / Campus

HBKU’s CSE graduate advances education data as a UN fellow

Published: 06 Nov 2018 - 08:55 am | Last Updated: 05 Nov 2021 - 07:35 pm
Abdulaziz Al Homaid has been working at the Centre for Humanitarian Data to provide accurate and reliable data in times of crises.

Abdulaziz Al Homaid has been working at the Centre for Humanitarian Data to provide accurate and reliable data in times of crises.

The Peninsula

DOHA: A graduate of the College of Science and Engineering (CSE), part of Hamad Bin Khalifa University (HBKU), is working to improve access to education in areas facing critical humanitarian challenges.  Abdulaziz Al Homaid is working through a highly selective UN fellowship program at the Centre for Humanitarian Data in The Hague.

He earned a Master of Science in Data Science and Engineering degree from HBKU, was awarded a prestigious fellowship by Education Above All (EAA) in partnership with the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and the Centre for Humanitarian Data.

He is one of only four candidates selected to the 2018 Data Fellows program from more than 700 international applicants. During June and July, the fellows were based in The Hague, Netherlands, where they were tasked with designing and delivering projects targeting education data challenges including data science, data storytelling, predictive analytics, and user experience research.

OCHA’s Centre for Humanitarian Data was established to provide those involved in humanitarian response with access to the crucial data needed to make responsible and informed decisions during crises.

With Al Homaid’s assigned focus area being data science, he set out to gain a deeper understanding of the various types of education data most widely gathered and used in different crisis scenarios. Al Homaid chose to focus his data research on Iraq, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen, countries where complex emergency scenarios often arise.

Al Homaid, said, “My aim was to carry out extensive research using generated data to reshape a structured format by developing a ‘meta-dataset’ on education in emergency situations, which could be used to analyze its completeness for specific indicators.

An example would be to identify a missing indicator within one country, but its existence within the other, so it could provide a roadmap for the center and its partners to help fill this gap. This EAA-OCHA Fellowship has opened up so many avenues and enabled me to work with an organization such as the UN. The invaluable experience I’ve gained will definitely contribute to my future academic and career prospects.”

Al Homaid’s current responsibilities as a research associate at QCRI’s Social Computing department include adapting state-of-the-art machine learning techniques to two sectors; public health informatics for healthy living, and in urban dynamics. His current project involves building a machine-learning model that recommends an ideal daily lifestyle routine for individuals, based on their health data.