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NU Finalizing Qatar Expansion

School in Middle East could open Fall Quarter

Erin Dostal and Emily Glazer

Issue date: 4/9/07 Section: Campus
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By Erin Dostal and Emily Glazer
The Daily Northwestern

Northwestern is finalizing plans to open an undergraduate communication and journalism school in the Arab state of Qatar, with classes scheduled to begin as early as this fall, university officials said.

The NU campus will be in Education City, a compound of colleges sponsored by the Qatari government in the capital city of Doha.

Plans began when Qatari officials approached NU seeking to open a journalism school, said Medill Dean John Lavine. After speaking with NU officials, the Qatari government decided to add a communication program as well.

Communication Dean Barbara O'Keefe said although the school would initially have 40 students, she expects it "to grow over time."

Half the enrolled students would study journalism and half communication, Lavine said.

Although most students would be from Qatar, the rest would come from other parts of the Middle East or South Asia.

The courses taught on the Qatari campus would be similar to those taught in Evanston, both O'Keefe and Lavine said. Some might be taught in both Arabic and English, Lavine said. The program would provide funding to hire about 50 NU faculty and staff, who might rotate between the two campuses, the Chicago Tribune reported Friday.

Students in the Qatari schools would pay the same tuition as undergraduates in Evanston, which will be $35,064 next year.

Al Cubbage, NU's vice president for university relations, said the financial details of this project are undisclosed, but that "there would not be significant costs incurred by Northwestern."

Lavine said he hopes the new campus will expand Medill's international reach.

"The heart of the matter is that … there's an increasingly short distance between places all over the globe, and for those of us that deal with journalism and media, that's certainly true," Lavine said.

Most students complete their Teaching Media internships - quarter-long programs at professional news organizations - at U.S. sites, although some choose to go to organizations abroad, such as The Star in Johannesburg, South Africa.

The extension into Qatar will create TM programs in the Middle East, including possible connections with Al-Jazeera, the largest Arab television network, Lavine said.

"We certainly are not thinking about going to Qatar to create American media, but we are deeply committed to a free press," Lavine said. "It's just an extraordinary opportunity."
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Viewing Comments 1 - 3 of 4

Chicago

posted 4/11/07 @ 12:49 PM CST

Here is information from the latest DOS report on Religious Freedom in Qatar. If this is the Switzerland of the Middle East, God help us. Just imagine the (justifiably angry) reaction if a member of Congress submitted a bill to make the following true in the US. (Continued…)

Priorities

posted 4/12/07 @ 10:23 AM CST

I'm glad NU's brass can finally get some students who can afford to pay 35K plus alone for tuition and then get a job that doesn't even reach that mark. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Cyrus

posted 7/12/07 @ 8:55 AM CST

Well I'm from Massachusetts but have lived in Qatar for 5 years, I have a parent who works for a school in education city and I know that any university lucky enough to secure a place here will surely reap the benefits. (Continued…)

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