After completing the requirements for the master's degree in Islamic Studies, the student is expected to be able to:
- Have a deep faith in God and His Messenger and show a clear commitment to the teachings of Islam so that this is reflected in his personality, behavior, and dealings.
- To be able to demonstrate an in-depth understanding of the essential and critical knowledge, skills, attitudes, behaviors, practices, and applications of Islamic Studies.
- To analyze and compare the foundations, fundamentals, theoretical rules, and practical applications of Islamic studies, and the branches of Qur'anic, Hadith, jurisprudential, religious, Orientalism, Islam and the West.
- To be able to discuss and analyze the Qur'anic, Hadith, jurisprudence, religion, Orientalism, Islam and the West, and its scientific issues, including deduction, investigation, extraction of rules, and extrapolation of rules in Islamic studies.
- To deal with the practical applications of the specialization in the fields of teaching and training, studies, research, and scientific projects.
- To reflect deeply on contemporary applications, discuss doubts, answer questions, and weigh different opinions when critiquing and debating in the field of Islamic studies, including topics related to Islamic sects, Islamic movements, and interfaith dialog.
- Communicate effectively and competently with others, especially those who disagree with him, and work well within a team based on the general Islamic principles that call for understanding and cooperation for good.
- To conduct original research in investigating issues related to Jurisprudence and its Foundations in preparing his thesis, and in publishing solid research that includes scientific addition in peer-reviewed scientific journals.
- To contribute to the planning, preparation and revision of curricula in Islamic education subjects using different models of design in light of the theoretical frameworks of the curricula and the objectives of the stage education.