Northwestern University in Qatar

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Northwestern University in Qatar
NU-Q-logo.jpg
Motto Quaecumque Sunt Vera
Motto in English
Whatsoever things are true
Type Private
Established 2008
Affiliation United Methodist Church (formerly)
President Morton Schapiro
Dean Everette E. Dennis
Location
Campus Education City, 2,400 acres (9.7 km2)
Acceptance Rate 15.3% (2016)[1]
Colors Purple (official) and white (unofficial)
Mascot Willie the Wildcat
Website www.qatar.northwestern.edu

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Northwestern University in Qatar (NU-Q) is Northwestern University’s first overseas campus.[2] Founded in partnership with Qatar Foundation in 2008, NU-Q is located in Education City, Al Rayyan, Qatar. NU-Q offers a liberal arts and media education with undergraduate degrees awarded in communication and journalism.[3][4] The university graduated its first class in spring 2012.[5]

Academic Programs

The curriculum leading to the award of the Bachelor of Science in Communication degree is based on that of the Northwestern University School of Communication on Northwestern’s Evanston campus. Communication students at NU-Q pursue a major in Media Industries and Technologies, which combines elements of the Communication Studies and Radio/TV/Film majors offered in Evanston.[6] The curriculum leading to the award of the Bachelor of Science in Journalism degree draws on that of the Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications in Evanston; this program is accredited by the Accrediting Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.[7][8] Liberal arts courses are provided by Northwestern’s Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences.[9]

NU-Q courses are modeled closely on those offered on the Evanston campus, although adjustments have been made because NU-Q courses are taught in a fifteen-week semester system, rather than the ten-week quarter system in Evanston.[10][11] Additionally, courses with particular relevance to the region are offered at NU-Q.[12] In 2012, NU-Q secured permission from the Board of Trustees to make its own academic appointments.[13]

Lecture at NU-Q

NU-Q’s academic programs provide various opportunities for students to participate in international programs. Students in the journalism program are required to complete a junior year residency.[14] Juniors in the communication program are eligible to apply for the Evanston exchange.[11] Shorter international academic trips are offered at various times throughout the year. Past destinations have included Turkey, Switzerland, Italy, South Africa, France, India and the US. All students are eligible their sophomore year to apply for a one-week trip to Evanston, which takes place in May of each year.[15]

NU-Q students can access courses at the five other American universities located in Education City.[16]

Degrees awarded by Northwestern University on the Qatar Campus are accredited by the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools. All course instruction is in English[17] and admission is competitive (see acceptance rate).[18]

History

Entrance and lobby of NU-Q

Having been approached in 2006 by the Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development, Northwestern agreed the following year to open its Education City campus.[19] The inaugural NU-Q Class of 2012 began studies in August 2008.[6] Additional classes have been added each year, and the university has established strong ties with local organizations, partnering with media groups and collaborating with a number of regional initiatives to generate additional educational and professional opportunities for its students. Speakers invited to address the students and faculty have included journalist Evan Osnos, of The New Yorker;[20] television journalist Tim Sebastian;[21] Iranian-American journalist Roxana Saberi; Carlos Van Meek, head of output for Al Jazeera English and lead on the channel's launch in the US; Arthur Sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times; Jeff Cole, head of the World Internet Project; Rami Khouri, editor of the Beirut Daily Star, and Sofia Al Maria, author and filmmaker.

High School Summer Media Workshop offered at NU-Q

In 2010, NU-Q offered its first summer camp to high school students—a two-week course combining aspects of the Journalism and Communication programs.

Funding

Similar to other universities with campuses in Education City, Northwestern’s facilities are entirely paid for by Qatar. In 2014, Northwestern received $45.3 million dollars to run the Doha campus.[22] Also like other Doha campuses of U.S. universities, Qatari students at Northwestern have their tuition covered by Qatar. Students of other nationalities either pay for their own tuition or can sometimes receive scholarship money. Tuition for the school is about $48,000 per year.[23]

Students and Student Life

7th THIMUN Qatar Northwestern Film Festival

Regardless of passport, many students come from Qatar, and 30 nationalities are represented across the four classes at NU-Q, as of 2013. There are 207 students enrolled in the school.[23]

NU-Q has worked to integrate some western values into its Qatar campus. For example, there are many female students that attend NU-Q. There have been some concerns that this integration, which is not as common in Qatar can be slightly difficult to implement. Qatar adheres to Salafism, which is one of the most fundamental sects of Islam and dictates all aspects of society and life in the country.[24][25]

NU-Q students have access to the full range of student activities offered to all Education City students, including the "Hamid bin Khalifa University" Student Center, Recreation Center, clubs, organizations and athletic leagues.[26]

NU-Q is the host of many film and production related events, such as THIMUN Qatar Northwestern Film Festival and the NU-Q Student Research and Media Awards.

Students also participate in a wide variety of leadership, service and experiential learning initiatives both in Doha and internationally. Some of these initiatives include StrengthsQuest, LeaderShape and retreats designed to help students learn about their strengths and how to apply them in their academic and personal lives.[27]

In addition, students have access to and participate in a range of activities and clubs that are unique to NU-Q, including:[28]

Academic Freedoms and Freedom of the Press

Some students and faculty have raised concerns over whether journalism can be taught effectively in a country with limited freedom of expression and where reports of censorship arise from time to time.  Additionally, some members of Northwestern’s faculty have expressed “dissatisfaction with the academic and free speech protections”. In an interview with the Washington Post, former Northwestern Faculty Senate President, Stephen Eisenman, said that “teaching journalism as an enterprise in which you must first learn what not to ask, is no kind of journalism instruction at all” and continued that at NU-Q this was “likely a matter of encouraging some enquiries and making others strange, awkward, rude or unserious”.[29][30][31][32]

In an article by The Washington Post, Susan Dun, an assistant professor of communication at NU-Q said that some professors do exercise caution with statements, written work, or speeches that may reach a wider audience than just the Education City community.[33]

Mohanalakashmi Rajakumar, who taught English at Northwestern, VCU and Georgetown in Qatar published a book called “Love Comes Later” that was banned by Qatar in 2015 with no explanation due to the country’s strict censorship policies.[22]

Students at Northwestern have said that they face challenges due to the lack of first amendment rights protecting the media. Students have been harassed and intimidated when trying to capture images that would be considered routine or not offensive in the U.S. Some faculty members maintain that this teaches students persistence and creativity in overcoming obstacles to report on a story.[22]

Everette Dennis, the dean of NU-Q led a six-nation survey in 2015 that was financed by the Qatar National Research Fund and asked questions such as if people think their country is “headed in the right direction”. While the UAE, Egypt, Tunisia, Lebanon and Saudi Arabia all had answers to the question, there was no data from Qatar as the government blocked the question from being asked to survey participants.[22]

Residency

Journalism juniors spend ten weeks working in a professional organization somewhere around the world. Assignments have included Financial Times, National Geographic, Huffington Post, Grayling Public Relations, Qatar Foundation International and Vogue. The goal of the Journalism Residency is for students to get the kinds of hands-on experience that helps them develop new skills, test old skills, work under deadline pressure, hone their news judgment, sharpen their fact-checking and research skills, build confidence in their capabilities and explore new career paths not previously considered. This is a required component of the B.S. in journalism degree program.

Academic Trips

This program is open to NU-Q students and assists them with learning about how organizations work in other countries. Previous trips have included Turkey, Switzerland, Italy, United Kingdom and the United States.

Service Learning and Leadership

NU-Q students can participate in annual Spring Break Service Learning Trips to global destinations. The goal of the trips are to connect students to the needs of the larger worldwide community, provide insight and understanding of the historical and socio-political context of the visited country, and build a strong sense of global citizenship and commitment. Students complete assigned projects and reflections as part of the experience. Trip destinations have included Brazil, China, India, Morocco, South Africa, Tunisia, Zambia, and more.

Evanston Exchange

Students who are a pursuing the BS degree in communication can participate in the Evanston Communication Exchange Program during spring semester of their junior year, where they study at Northwestern's home campus, located near Chicago in Evanston, Illinois, USA.

Engage Chicago

Engage Chicago is an eight-week summer field study program that gives undergraduates a chance to live, work, serve and learn together in Chicago, USA, amidst a rich history and culture of civic engagement. The innovative program model deliberately combines academic coursework, placements at top community organizations/civic institutions, and powerful community experiences — all under the guidance of expert Northwestern faculty, staff and community mentors. Through hands-on experience, thoughtful reflection, and a summer living with a vibrant community of peers, Engage Chicago is designed to be a powerful opportunity for students to learn about a great city, about social change, and about themselves.

Leadership

The leadership of NU-Q is appointed by the Northwestern University Provost, in consultation with the Qatar Foundation.[34] An educator, author and media expert, NU-Q’s dean Dr. Everette E. Dennis was appointed in June 2011. The founding dean was Dr. John Margolis, an associate provost at Northwestern University who served from 2008-11.[35][36] Associate Dean for Academic Affairs Jeremy Cohen was appointed in 2013, as were Scott Curtis, PhD, Director of the Communication Program; Mary Dedinsky, Director of the Journalism Program, and Sandra Richards, Director of the Liberal Arts Program. [13][37] Cohen announced his departure in 2014 and is no longer with NU-Q.[38]

The NU-Q staff provide the range of support services expected in an American college or university, including professionally staffed offices for admissions, academic and personal counseling, student activities, student records, information technology, human resources, finance, marketing/public relations, and facilities.[39] The collections of the professionally staffed NU-Q library focus on media issues, and students and faculty also have access to all electronic resources available on the Evanston campus and to the services of inter-library loan.[40] A production facilities department provides support for the media-intensive work of students and faculty at NU-Q.[41]

Community

In addition to its core mission of providing undergraduate education to its students, NU-Q seeks to serve as a regional center for issues related to communication and journalism.[42] Often in collaboration with local, regional, or international organizations, NU-Q sponsors seminars and colloquia on topics related to the media.[43] NU-Q also sponsors short, non-credit programs for pre-college students, which are designed to expose them to developments in media.[44]

Outside of the NU-Q and Education City communities, freedom of speech is highly limited and anyone who threatened “social values” or Qatar’s “general order” through any forms of news, photos, videos or audio recordings can be sentenced to prison. A report by the former President of the Northwestern University Faculty Senate conducted during his tenure as President highlighted that these implicit community values seem to be ingrained in the students, who seemed to willingly comply with these restrictions both intentionally and unintentionally.[29]

Faculty

There are 35 faculty members at NU-Q.[31][23]

Many of the faculty and instructors at NU-Q are not tenured which puts some limits on academic freedom for the professors. This leaves these professors answerable to the NU-Q Dean, a situation that is not dissimilar to faculty members at Northwestern’s Evanston Campus. In Qatar, however, a report by Stephen Eiesenman, former President of Northwestern Faculty Senate, pointed out that the Dean has much more authority than in the United States. Additionally, if a faculty member is no longer employed by NU-Q, they must leave the country, forcing them to uproot their lives there, a situation which no doubt puts pressure on the faculty member to work within the confines of a more limited set of academic and intellectual freedoms. Additionally, faculty members at NU-Q are not eligible for tenure unless they are visiting from the Evanston or Chicago campuses.[23]

Many professors at Doha campuses of U.S. universities are incentivized to trade in their teaching positions in the U.S. for ones in Qatar with a salary premium, housing arrangements and research funding.[22]

Joint Advisory Board

Like other campuses in Education City, NU-Q has a Joint Advisory Board, with members designated by Northwestern University and the Qatar Foundation. As of 2011 members of the NU-Q Joint Advisory Board are: H.E. Sheikha Hind Bint Hamad Al Thani (Director of HH the Emir’s Office) and Dr. Daniel Linzer (Provost, Northwestern University), co-chairs; Dr. Abdel Rahman Azzam (Communication Adviser to HH Sheikha Mozah), Thomas Cline (Vice President and General Counsel, Northwestern University), Dr. Lee Huebner (Professor, School of Media and Public Affairs, George Washington University), Wadah Khanfar (Director General of the Aljazeera Network), Rami G. Khouri (Director of the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs at the American University of Beirut and editor at large of The Daily Star newspaper), and William Osborn (Chair, Northwestern University Board of Trustees). Dr. Abdulla Al-Thani (Vice President for Education, the Qatar Foundation) and Dr. Everette E. Dennis (Dean, NU-Q), serve as ex officio members.[45]

Criticisms

Northwestern, as with all other U.S. universities with campuses in Doha has been the subject of ongoing criticism of whether a campus in Doha is an appropriate endeavor. In an interview with Gulf News Journal, Herbert London, president of the London Center for Policy Research and a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, said “universities I think have compromised themselves” by having campuses in a country like Qatar where academic freedom and freedom of the press are severely limited.[46]

Along with other universities with campuses in Qatar, Northwestern has received criticism for accepting money from Qatar due to their support of terrorism worldwide and their abysmal human rights record, especially in the lead up to the 2022 World Cup. Some question if universities who profit from campuses in Qatar are thereby complicit in Qatar’s sponsorship of terrorism and human rights abuses.[22][47][48]

Facilities

Students working at NU-Q's newsroom

Until its permanent facility is completed, NU-Q occupies the top floor of the Carnegie Mellon University in Qatar building in Education City.[4] The facilities include a 70-student lecture hall, a 93-person auditorium, one 30-person seminar room, three 25-person teaching labs, one 24-person and one 18-person computer lab, a library, a small video studio used for indoor training, eight video and audio edit suites, a student lounge area, and a dozen shared seminar and study group rooms of various sizes. In addition to the facilities in the CMU-Q building, NU-Q features a specially-built studio facility including two video/television studios which also incorporate a newsroom, one large video edit room, five small video edit rooms and audio edit rooms.[49]

Student newsroom at NU-Q

NU-Q’s permanent home was designed by architect Antoine Predock, and is projected for completion in 2015.[50] The facility includes four video production studios, two 150-person lecture halls, a black box theatre, a two-studio radio station facility for teaching and broadcast activities, a multi-media newsroom, a library capable of housing 40,000 volumes, office facilities for more than 50 faculty and 60 staff, a conference center for events and special programs, student lounge and activity spaces, classrooms, labs, small lecture halls, and seminar rooms. The facility will also have gathering spaces with seating to encourage informal faculty-student and student-student interactions. These “nodes” will be equipped with video screens and technology which will enable NU-Q students to connect computers for presentations. The largest of these areas will be equipped with a video wall displaying a variety of media sources as well as student and faculty projects designed to help create an informal learning environment for new media techniques.[51]

Building Features:

• Four video production studios

• Two 150-person lecture halls

• Black box theater

• Two-studio radio station

• Multi-media newsroom

• Research library containing electronic, print and DVD materials

• Student lounge and activity spaces

References

  1. http://www.qatar.northwestern.edu/admissions/faq/
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  17. Northwestern University in Qatar
  18. Daily Northwestern
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  20. Gulf Times
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  28. Northwestern University in Qatar
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  34. Daily Northwestern
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  39. Northwestern University in Qatar
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  43. AME Info
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  45. Northwestern University in Qatar
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  49. Northwestern University in Qatar
  50. Zawya
  51. Northwestern University in Qatar

External links