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

Qatar

Qatari-designed app wins World Summit Award

Published: 22 Mar 2017 - 10:30 pm | Last Updated: 12 Nov 2021 - 06:44 am
A twitter image of the app being used.

A twitter image of the app being used.

The Peninsula

Qatar Foundation International’s (QFI) Madar Al-Huruf Arabic learning app is one of the 40 mobile innovation winners for 2016 selected from 451 global nominations by the UN-based World Summit Award.

Madar Al-Huruf, which means “wheel of letters” in Arabic, was designed by Muneera Al Badi, a Qatari VCUQatar graduate.

The wheel is a valuable language tool and mobile app that introduces users to the Arabic alphabet. Anyone who is unfamiliar with the Arabic alphabet can write his or her name by matching English letters and sounds to their Arabic phonetic counterparts.

The wheel has been used to connect students all over the world with the Arabic language and demystify the intimidating characters to ease Arabic learning and communication.

The first iteration of Madar Al-Huruf was a physical wheel, created and designed by Al Badi, for QFI’s Arabic language and Arab Culture programme. Al Badi also developed a user guide and worked closely with US-based teachers of Arabic in Washington, DC, and Tucson, AZ to finalise the wheel’s design and a mini unit for use in the classroom, making the wheel a truly global and collaborative endeavor.

“When I thought about students learning Arabic, I felt that creating a tool to help them write their names would assist teachers in connecting them to the new language since a person’s name is his or her identity. I then began working on Madar Al-Huruf, with QFI’s support,” said Al Badi.

“It is my first design to be patented. As a Qatari, I’m proud to have designed an educational tool that helps spread my native language,” added Al Badi.

Due to the success and demand of the physical Arabic wheel, QFI worked with Al Badi and partnered with Qatar Computing Research Institute (QCRI), a nonprofit multidisciplinary computing research institute founded by the Qatar Foundation, and later with MindGrub, LLC, to adapt the design into an iOS and Android compatible application. Designed to accommodate both novice and expert users, the app now includes sound to hear the spoken letters so that beginners can hear and sound out the Arabic alphabet.

Additionally, the app now allows the user to customize and share their name in Arabic as a digital sticker online through social media.

The WSA winners were selected by a Jury of international ICT experts in two democratic rounds. Each UN Member State is eligible to nominate one product per category for the World Summit Award.

This way any nomination results from a national pre-selection prior to the international WSA Jury and guarantees a fair and democratic process.