Ownership belongs with teachers, not overloaded administrators

Redesigning how Teachers

get Approval to Teach

in Dubai

Knowledge & Human Development Authority

Challenge

This project shows how I use systems thinking + strategic reframing to bring clarity to a highly complex, policy-heavy process affecting thousands of teachers, schools, and regulators

Teacher licensing for private schools in Dubai was fragmented across multiple entities. Teachers, especially overseas hires, were confused. Schools absorbed the complexity. KHDA struggled with volume of inquiries and inconsistency in approvals.

The core problem wasn’t digital.
It was lack of clarity, ownership, and alignment across the system.

My contribution

1. Reframed the problem

I led the team in shifting the focus from:
“How do we simplify the steps?”
to

“How do we give teachers ownership and visibility?”

This became the north star that shaped every decision.

2. Mapped the system to expose hidden complexity

Through shadowing, interviews, and ecosystem mapping, I helped KHDA see for the first time:

  • Where misinformation originated

  • Where policy created operational bottlenecks

  • How schools became unintended process owners

  • How overseas teachers were disproportionately affected

This clarity changed how leadership approached the problem.

3. Prototyped new service propositions

The breakthrough came from designing:

  • A Teacher Profile that teachers control (not schools)

  • A step-by-step Information Hub that gives transparent guidance to local and international teachers

  • A service bundle 'Move to Dubai and Teach' that helps teachers relocate to Dubai, handle the paperwork, and start teaching with confidence.

  • A more integrated backend to support compliance and reduce repetitive reviews

These prototypes made the future tangible and accelerated decision-making.

4. Aligned stakeholders across policy, IT, and operations

I facilitated workshops that helped each group see:

  • Their role in the ecosystem

  • The impact of their decisions on others

  • How a single shared roadmap could unify efforts

This alignment was crucial in a regulatory environment.

5. Coached KHDA’s internal designers and non-designers

I built capability so the organisation could continue the work, contributing to the creation of KHDA’s internal service design team within Strategy. 

Breakthrough

  • A senior stakeholder said: “This is the first time I’ve seen our entire ecosystem on one page.”

  • Teachers testing the prototype expressed relief: “I wish I had this when I moved here.”

  • Leadership adopted the roadmap because it was grounded in user-tested feasibility, not assumptions.

Outcomes

  • Clear, user-friendly Teacher Profile that gives teachers ownership

  • Transparent step-by-step guidance hub

  • Reduced duplication and improved data quality through system integration

  • Faster approvals and less manual burden on KHDA staff

  • A scalable roadmap for future phases

  • Seeding of KHDA’s internal service design capability

Reflection

This project reinforced my belief that systems clarity is transformational.

By reframing the problem and giving teachers ownership, we shifted the entire licensing experience from opaque to transparent, and from reactive to guided.

The biggest win wasn’t the prototype. It was the shared alignment across policy, IT, and operations that made future transformation possible.

Ownership belongs with teachers, not overloaded administrators

Redesigning how Teachers

get Approval to Teach
in Dubai

Knowledge & Human Development Authority

Challenge

This project shows how I use systems thinking + strategic reframing to bring clarity to a highly complex, policy-heavy process affecting thousands of teachers, schools, and regulators

Teacher licensing for private schools in Dubai was fragmented across multiple entities. Teachers, especially overseas hires, were confused. Schools absorbed the complexity. KHDA struggled with volume of inquiries and inconsistency in approvals.

The core problem wasn’t digital.
It was lack of clarity, ownership, and alignment across the system.

My contribution

1. Reframed the problem

I led the team in shifting the focus from:
“How do we simplify the steps?”
to

“How do we give teachers ownership and visibility?”

This became the north star that shaped every decision.

2. Mapped the system to expose hidden complexity

Through shadowing, interviews, and ecosystem mapping, I helped KHDA see for the first time:

  • Where misinformation originated

  • Where policy created operational bottlenecks

  • How schools became unintended process owners

  • How overseas teachers were disproportionately affected

This clarity changed how leadership approached the problem.

3. Prototyped new service propositions

The breakthrough came from designing:

  • A Teacher Profile that teachers control (not schools)

  • A step-by-step Information Hub that gives transparent guidance to local and international teachers

  • A service bundle 'Move to Dubai and Teach' that helps teachers relocate to Dubai, handle the paperwork, and start teaching with confidence.

  • A more integrated backend to support compliance and reduce repetitive reviews

These prototypes made the future tangible and accelerated decision-making.

4. Aligned stakeholders across policy, IT, and operations

I facilitated workshops that helped each group see:

  • Their role in the ecosystem

  • The impact of their decisions on others

  • How a single shared roadmap could unify efforts

This alignment was crucial in a regulatory environment.

5. Coached KHDA’s internal designers and non-designers

I built capability so the organisation could continue the work, contributing to the creation of KHDA’s internal service design team within Strategy. 

Breakthrough

  • A senior stakeholder said: “This is the first time I’ve seen our entire ecosystem on one page.”

  • Teachers testing the prototype expressed relief: “I wish I had this when I moved here.”

  • Leadership adopted the roadmap because it was grounded in user-tested feasibility, not assumptions.

Outcomes

  • Clear, user-friendly Teacher Profile that gives teachers ownership

  • Transparent step-by-step guidance hub

  • Reduced duplication and improved data quality through system integration

  • Faster approvals and less manual burden on KHDA staff

  • A scalable roadmap for future phases

  • Seeding of KHDA’s internal service design capability

Reflection

This project reinforced my belief that systems clarity is transformational.

By reframing the problem and giving teachers ownership, we shifted the entire licensing experience from opaque to transparent, and from reactive to guided.

The biggest win wasn’t the prototype. It was the shared alignment across policy, IT, and operations that made future transformation possible.

Ownership belongs with teachers, not overloaded administrators

Redesigning how Teachers

get Approval to Teach

in Dubai

Knowledge & Human Development Authority

Challenge

This project shows how I use systems thinking + strategic reframing to bring clarity to a highly complex, policy-heavy process affecting thousands of teachers, schools, and regulators

Teacher licensing for private schools in Dubai was fragmented across multiple entities. Teachers, especially overseas hires, were confused. Schools absorbed the complexity. KHDA struggled with volume of inquiries and inconsistency in approvals.

The core problem wasn’t digital.
It was lack of clarity, ownership, and alignment across the system.

My contribution

1. Reframed the problem

I led the team in shifting the focus from:
“How do we simplify the steps?”
to

“How do we give teachers ownership and visibility?”

This became the north star that shaped every decision.

2. Mapped the system to expose hidden complexity

Through shadowing, interviews, and ecosystem mapping, I helped KHDA see for the first time:

  • Where misinformation originated

  • Where policy created operational bottlenecks

  • How schools became unintended process owners

  • How overseas teachers were disproportionately affected

This clarity changed how leadership approached the problem.

3. Prototyped new service propositions

The breakthrough came from designing:

  • A Teacher Profile that teachers control (not schools)

  • A step-by-step Information Hub that gives transparent guidance to local and international teachers

  • A service bundle 'Move to Dubai and Teach' that helps teachers relocate to Dubai, handle the paperwork, and start teaching with confidence.

  • A more integrated backend to support compliance and reduce repetitive reviews

These prototypes made the future tangible and accelerated decision-making.

4. Aligned stakeholders across policy, IT, and operations

I facilitated workshops that helped each group see:

  • Their role in the ecosystem

  • The impact of their decisions on others

  • How a single shared roadmap could unify efforts

This alignment was crucial in a regulatory environment.

5. Coached KHDA’s internal designers and non-designers

I built capability so the organisation could continue the work, contributing to the creation of KHDA’s internal service design team within Strategy. 

Breakthrough

  • A senior stakeholder said: “This is the first time I’ve seen our entire ecosystem on one page.”

  • Teachers testing the prototype expressed relief: “I wish I had this when I moved here.”

  • Leadership adopted the roadmap because it was grounded in user-tested feasibility, not assumptions.

Outcomes

  • Clear, user-friendly Teacher Profile that gives teachers ownership

  • Transparent step-by-step guidance hub

  • Reduced duplication and improved data quality through system integration

  • Faster approvals and less manual burden on KHDA staff

  • A scalable roadmap for future phases

  • Seeding of KHDA’s internal service design capability

Reflection

This project reinforced my belief that systems clarity is transformational.

By reframing the problem and giving teachers ownership, we shifted the entire licensing experience from opaque to transparent, and from reactive to guided.

The biggest win wasn’t the prototype. It was the shared alignment across policy, IT, and operations that made future transformation possible.

This project shows how I use systems thinking + strategic reframing to bring clarity to a highly complex, policy-heavy process affecting thousands of teachers, schools, and regulators

Challenge

Teacher licensing for private schools in Dubai was fragmented across multiple entities.
Teachers, especially overseas hires, were confused. Schools absorbed the complexity. KHDA struggled with volume of inquiries and inconsistency in approvals.

The core problem wasn’t digital.
It was lack of clarity, ownership, and alignment across the system.

My contribution

1. Reframed the problem

I led the team in shifting the focus from:
“How do we simplify the steps?”
to
“How do we give teachers ownership and visibility?”

This became the north star that shaped every decision.

2. Mapped the system to expose hidden complexity

Through shadowing, interviews, and ecosystem mapping, I helped KHDA see for the first time:

  • Where misinformation originated

  • Where policy created operational bottlenecks

  • How schools became unintended process owners

  • How overseas teachers were disproportionately affected

This clarity changed how leadership approached the problem.

3. Prototyped new service propositions

The breakthrough came from designing:

  • A Teacher Profile that teachers control (not schools)

  • A step-by-step Information Hub that gives transparent guidance to local and international teachers

  • A service bundle 'Move to Dubai and Teach' that helps teachers relocate to Dubai, handle the paperwork, and start teaching with confidence.

  • A more integrated backend to support compliance and reduce repetitive reviews

These prototypes made the future tangible and accelerated decision-making.

4. Aligned stakeholders across policy, IT, and operations

I facilitated workshops that helped each group see:

  • Their role in the ecosystem

  • The impact of their decisions on others

  • How a single shared roadmap could unify efforts

This alignment was crucial in a regulatory environment.

5. Coached KHDA’s internal designers and non-designers

I built capability so the organisation could continue the work, contributing to the creation of KHDA’s internal service design team within Strategy. 

1. Reframed the problem

I led the team in shifting the focus from:
“How do we simplify the steps?”
to

“How do we give teachers ownership and visibility?”

This became the north star that shaped every decision.

2. Mapped the system to expose hidden complexity

Through shadowing, interviews, and ecosystem mapping, I helped KHDA see for the first time:

  • Where misinformation originated

  • Where policy created operational bottlenecks

  • How schools became unintended process owners

  • How overseas teachers were disproportionately affected

This clarity changed how leadership approached the problem.

3. Prototyped new service propositions

The breakthrough came from designing:

  • A Teacher Profile that teachers control (not schools)

  • A step-by-step Information Hub that gives transparent guidance to local and international teachers

  • A service bundle 'Move to Dubai and Teach' that helps teachers relocate to Dubai, handle the paperwork, and start teaching with confidence.

  • A more integrated backend to support compliance and reduce repetitive reviews

These prototypes made the future tangible and accelerated decision-making.

4. Aligned stakeholders across policy, IT, and operations

I facilitated workshops that helped each group see:

  • Their role in the ecosystem

  • The impact of their decisions on others

  • How a single shared roadmap could unify efforts

This alignment was crucial in a regulatory environment.

5. Coached KHDA’s internal designers and non-designers

I built capability so the organisation could continue the work, contributing to the creation of KHDA’s internal service design team within Strategy. 

Breakthrough

  • A senior stakeholder said: “This is the first time I’ve seen our entire ecosystem on one page.”

  • Teachers testing the prototype expressed relief: “I wish I had this when I moved here.”

  • Leadership adopted the roadmap because it was grounded in user-tested feasibility, not assumptions.

Outcomes

  • Clear, user-friendly Teacher Profile that gives teachers ownership

  • Transparent step-by-step guidance hub

  • Reduced duplication and improved data quality through system integration

  • Faster approvals and less manual burden on KHDA staff

  • A scalable roadmap for future phases

  • Seeding of KHDA’s internal service design capability

This project reinforced my belief that systems clarity is transformational.

By reframing the problem and giving teachers ownership, we shifted the entire licensing experience from opaque to transparent, and from reactive to guided.

The biggest win wasn’t the prototype. It was the shared alignment across policy, IT, and operations that made future transformation possible.

Reflection

Challenge

My contribution

Reflection

Outcomes

Breakthrough