Mohamed Ahmed Abdel Latif (; born 20 June 1972) is an Egyptian educational administrator who has served as the Minister of Education of Egypt in the cabinet of Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly's second ministry since 3 July 2024.
Abdel Latif was born in Cairo, Egypt in June 1972. He is the son of Nermien Ismail, founder and owner of Nermein Ismail Schools (NIS). Through his mother, he is the grandson of Field Marshal Ahmad Ismail Ali, Egypt's Minister of War and Commander-in-Chief during the October 1973 War.
Abdel Latif is an educational leader with nearly three decades of experience in school management, institutional development, and education reform. Prior to entering government, he held senior leadership roles within the private education sector, most notably overseeing the expansion and academic performance of Nermien Ismail Schools, a network employing more than 3,500 educators and administrators.
His work in the sector has focused on improving instructional quality, strengthening institutional governance, and promoting evidence-based planning. Abdel Latif has conducted field visits to more than 400 schools across Egypt and over 150 schools internationally, including in Japan, Denmark, Germany, Spain, and the United States. These engagements have shaped his approach to benchmarking global education practices and adapting them to national priorities.
Abdel Latif was appointed Minister of Education and Technical Education on 3 July 2024. Since assuming office, he has led a reform agenda centered on improving learning conditions, strengthening educational quality, and modernizing system governance. His first year focused on operational measures aimed at addressing classroom overcrowding, teacher distribution, school attendance, foundational learning, and secondary-level ICT integration.
Initiatives undertaken during his inaugural ministerial year include:
These efforts were positioned within international benchmarks, where average class sizes range from 30 to 50 students in China and around 38 students in Japan, according to OECD and sectoral publications.