In Syrian schools, new government means a new curriculum: What changed
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| Douma and Homs, Syria
Syria鈥檚 new school year, the first since the ouster of autocratic President Bashar al-Assad, kicked off with a double challenge for teachers: Classes started without printed textbooks, but with a new curriculum.
For Firas Shaheen, a history and geography teacher who has spent nearly two decades teaching across Syria鈥檚 shifting front lines, that latter challenge is likely to be the tougher of the two.
To him, a curriculum is more than a set of lessons; it is a blueprint for how a nation understands itself. Setting a new one is a high-stakes enterprise in a country emerging from war and economic collapse, where many children grew up under bombardment and hunger.
Why We Wrote This
As one veteran teacher puts it, a curriculum is more than lessons; it shows how a nation understands itself. Syria鈥檚 new school year, the first since the fall of the Assad regime, has a revised look at history and increased emphasis on religion.
鈥淓ducation must align with state policy and national identity to strengthen national belonging and develop a generation away from violence and conflicts,鈥 says Mr. Shaheen, who teaches at two private schools in war-shattered Douma, near Damascus.
As classes resumed, teachers across Syria pored over hastily circulated PDF versions of the new curriculum, trying to understand what had survived and what had been cut under President Ahmed al-Sharaa, an Islamist former rebel commander who promises reform.
鈥淐hanging the curriculum is harder than changing the constitution,鈥 Education Minister Mohammed Abdul Rahman Turko said on Al-Arabiya鈥檚 Mazeej podcast in mid-September.
Rebuilding, he noted, presents a major challenge. Syria has 253,000 teachers and 19,400 schools, nearly 40% of which are in ruins. The education system currently serves 4.2 million students, while another 2.4 million have dropped out. The ministry expects 1.5 million displaced children to return from Lebanon, Turkey, and Jordan over the coming year.
Rather than undertake a full overhaul, the ministry recycled older materials while making selective revisions: History and geography saw the most changes; religion and math expanded; foreign languages were reduced.
Gone is the 鈥淣ational and Social Education鈥 course revamped in 2017, which merged civics with loyalty to the Assad family.
Teachers offer mixed views. While many agree on the importance of fostering Syrian unity, they differ sharply on how much space Islam should occupy and how to teach a history marked by conflict and division.
Shifting history
In areas like Douma and the mixed city of Homs, where bombed-out neighborhoods recall the war鈥檚 worst memories, teachers interpret the revisions through the lens of their own experiences and communities struggling to rebuild.
鈥淭he current curriculum describes events as they truly occurred, including the security repression of the Assad regime,鈥 says Mr. Shaheen.
A graduate of the University of Damascus, he began his career in public schools under Assad rule. He later taught in rebel-held, besieged Douma, then in Turkish-administered schools for displaced Syrians in the north, before eventually returning to Douma after Mr. Assad鈥檚 fall.
He has watched textbooks鈥 accounts of the same events rewritten to fit new political realities. Today鈥檚 history lessons no longer glorify the 鈥淐orrective Movement鈥 of 1970, when Hafez al-Assad, Bashar鈥檚 father, seized power in a military coup, nor the 鈥淥ctober Liberation War鈥 of 1973, Syria鈥檚 short but emotionally charged battle with Israel over the Golan Heights.
The portrayal of other powers mirrors diplomatic developments. 鈥淭urkey was once described as the Ottoman occupation,鈥 Mr. Shaheen says, recalling how its image improved after 2000 when relations between Damascus and Ankara warmed, only to turn negative again after Turkey supported Syrian rebels.
The Ottoman period, in the current telling, is 鈥済ood in its early days,鈥 when it supported Arab administration.
鈥淲henever a regime changes or the controlling forces in a region change, it is natural that the curriculum changes according to the policies of those controlling powers,鈥 Mr. Shaheen says.
For Zeina Khiti, also a geography and history teacher in Douma, the challenge is to rebuild from intellectual rubble.
鈥淪tudents only learned about their towns or neighboring areas through news reports: who was bombed, who was displaced, who protested,鈥 she says.
The Assad-era curriculum, she explains, 鈥渋solated Syria from its surroundings entirely,鈥 leaving students unaware of the Arab world or even their own country鈥檚 geography.
鈥淪tudents in middle and high school do not know the necessary information about their country 鈥 its terrain, soil, climate, resources, and natural wealth,鈥 she says.
In the mixed city of Homs, still grappling with post-war violence, teachers face a different reality. They describe a struggle over facts, memory, and the role of religion and reasoning. Some note that students from neighborhoods that remained under Mr. Assad鈥檚 control during the war tend to be on better academic footing than their displaced counterparts.
Reciting Quran correctly
At the Suhail Jaber Abdo primary school, assistant principal Shaza al-Mustafa notes the centrality of religion in the new curriculum.
鈥淭he religion class hours have increased, and the curriculum emphasizes Quranic verses and Hadiths about ethics and coexistence,鈥 says Ms. Mustafa.
Religion teacher Ghadd Tomeh is delighted. 鈥淭he curriculum has improved,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he old curricula focused mainly on ethics, but now we cover more aspects related to Islamic religion.鈥
Now students are expected to memorize longer Quranic verses and apply moral lessons to daily life. For the first time, upper primary students are learning to recite the Quran correctly.
鈥淭he Quran disciplines students and instills religious and ethical values,鈥 adds Ms. Tomeh, acknowledging that the verses resonate differently with different children. Some of her students are Alawite, others Sunni, and a few have recently returned from displacement in the north.
鈥淲ith diversity, each student understands Islam from their own perspective,鈥 she says.
Around the corner, at the Ahmed Mutaib Darwish High School for boys, a history teacher says the new curriculum feels like a step backward.
鈥淭he old curriculum was more modern and analytical,鈥 says the teacher, requesting anonymity. 鈥淣ow we have returned to memorization. It is more intensive, and entire historical eras are presented focusing only on the negative aspects, ignoring positives.鈥
She has taught since 2020 but fears the latest political shifts could see her reassigned to a distant rural post. It鈥檚 a quiet way, she says, of pushing teachers out under new education authorities dominated by natives of Idlib, the rural province that launched the campaign ousting President Assad. Several of her female Alawite colleagues, who were relocated to rural areas, resigned because they did not feel safe there.
Sectarian and political bias, she says, still seep through the new textbooks. She cites a historical passage that once recognized three revolutionary leaders 鈥 Sunni, Druze, and Alawite 鈥 symbolizing the country鈥檚 diversity. Now a second Sunni leader has replaced the member of the Alawite sect, which supported the Assad family.
The changes also intrude on family life. 鈥淭he child asks questions when they see that their mother is not wearing a hijab, and the curriculum says an unveiled woman is sinful,鈥 she says. 鈥淗ow will the child view their mother?鈥
Less foreign language instruction
School director Bashar al-Ali notes that the classroom itself has transformed. Many Shiite and Alawite families have left Homs, replaced by returnees and displaced students who had fled to Turkey, Jordan, and northern Syria.
鈥淭hese students鈥 educational levels are very weak,鈥 he says. 鈥淎 student entering the 11th grade is equivalent to an eighth-grade student here in Syria.鈥
He also laments what has been stripped from the curriculum. Foreign-language instruction, widely seen as a bridge to opportunity, has sharply decreased. French in the Baccalaureate dropped from five hours per week to one hour. Russian is not currently taught.
鈥淚 am in favor of keeping it because a second language develops student skills, whether Russian or French,鈥 Mr. Ali says. 鈥淎 second language is good for the student鈥檚 professional future.鈥
For Hiba Mahmoud al-Ashqar, a social studies teacher at a girls鈥 school in Homs that is guarded by an armed sentry, the deeper loss is the erosion of critical thinking.
鈥淭he goal,鈥 she says, 鈥渟hould be to give students an accurate understanding of their rich history, away from extremism and sectarian ideology, producing an educated and aware generation.鈥
Syria鈥檚 Ministry of Education spokesperson declined to comment for this story.