
From architecture studios to engineering labs, the Jeddah-based institution is taking a different approach to graduate readiness.
As employers worldwide grow increasingly vocal about the gap between what graduates know and what workplaces actually need, one Saudi university has been quietly building a response — not through a standalone training program, but by weaving human-centered skills directly into the fabric of every course it offers.
Effat University, based in Jeddah, has made soft skills development a core part of its academic model across all four colleges — engineering, business, architecture and design, and humanities. The approach reflects a broader shift in how employers are evaluating talent. According to LinkedIn Global Talent Trends, 69% of U.S. executives now say they plan to prioritize candidates with strong soft skills, particularly transferable ones that enable cross-functional collaboration.
The numbers point to a real problem. While graduates tend to rate their own soft skills highly, hiring managers consistently tell a different story — flagging critical thinking, communication, and emotional intelligence as the capabilities most likely to be missing when new hires arrive.
Soft Skills as Curriculum, Not Add-On
At Effat, the distinction between technical education and human-centered development has largely been dissolved. Whether a student is studying computer engineering or cinematic arts, the expectation is the same: that they will graduate with both domain expertise and the interpersonal tools to apply it effectively in a professional environment.
One of the more visible expressions of this commitment is the university’s dedicated Soft Skills Studios — hands-on lab environments where students work through scenarios involving emotional intelligence, digital storytelling, cross-cultural communication, and collaborative leadership. The labs are designed to replicate the pressures of real workplace settings, including fast-paced decision-making and stakeholder management.
In the architecture program, the approach takes on a particularly concrete form. Students work directly with institutions including the Royal Commission for the Holy Sites of Makkah, engaging with live projects that require them to present to external stakeholders, manage diverse teams, and navigate culturally sensitive design challenges.
One standout example is the Al-Osayla Project, in which students took on urban development work near sacred sites — a context that demands not only technical precision but cultural awareness and communication skill of a high order.
“In the Architecture program at Effat University, students move beyond technical mastery to lead real-world projects. They present to stakeholders, manage diverse teams, and solve culturally sensitive design challenges — developing skills essential for today’s architectural leaders,” said Dr. Asmaa Ibrahim, Dean of ECoAD and Director of MSAU.
The Mentorship Layer
Beyond the studios and project-based work, Effat has built what it describes as a Mentorship-First Model into its student experience. Every student is paired with faculty members and industry professionals who guide them through career planning, personal branding, and workplace dynamics — support structures that are often left entirely to chance at other institutions.
The World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report has identified analytical thinking, creativity, leadership, and resilience as among the top ten most in-demand skills through 2027. As AI and automation continue to shift what routine work looks like, those capabilities are becoming the primary differentiator between graduates who thrive and those who struggle to find their footing.
“AI has the potential to lead to major shifts in how we hire and who we hire. As automation takes over routine, repeatable tasks, the value of inherently human abilities like problem-solving, adaptability, and collaboration becomes even more pronounced,” said Erin Scruggs, LinkedIn’s VP and Head of Global Talent.
Effat’s model positions its graduates directly in that space — trained not just to perform technical tasks, but to lead, communicate, and adapt in environments where those human capabilities are becoming the scarcest resource in the room.