Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08DOHA841
2008-12-03 10:44:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Doha
Cable title:  

CODEL HINOJOSA DISCUSSES BRINGING MORE U.S.

Tags:  PREL KPAO OEXC OREP QA 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO7231
PP RUEHDE RUEHDIR
DE RUEHDO #0841/01 3381044
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 031044Z DEC 08
FM AMEMBASSY DOHA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 8493
INFO RUEHZM/GULF COOPERATION COUNCIL COLLECTIVE
RUEAUSA/DEPT OF EDUCATION WASHINGTON DC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 DOHA 000841 

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

H PLEASE PASS TO OFFICE OF CONGRESSMAN HINJOSA
PLEASE ALSO PASS TO EDUCATION AND LABOR COMMITTEE PERMANENT
STAFF MEMBER (MAJORITY) RICARDO MARTINEZ

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREL KPAO OEXC OREP QA
SUBJECT: CODEL HINOJOSA DISCUSSES BRINGING MORE U.S.
SCHOOLS TO QATAR

----------
KEY POINTS
----------

-- Codel Hinojosa's members consulted with deans,
administrators and students of the six U.S. university branch
campuses at Education City, noting that the U.S. university
presence in Qatar was "much larger" than they had originally
thought.

-- Codel members urged Qatar Foundation's president to
explore adding not only an American law school, but also high
schools and community colleges to the mix of educational
options available at Education City.

-- University deans noted that greater flexibility in visa
processing for students, and allowing faculty to continue
National Science Foundation grants while posted to Qatar,
would help smooth out obstacles to greater exchanges between
their home campuses and the branch campuses in Doha.

--------
COMMENTS
--------

-- (SBU) This Codel represented important USG engagement with
Qatar in the education sector, something we need more of. As
Qatar seeks to transform itself into a knowledge-based
economy, opportunities for U.S. educational and research
institutions in Qatar will only grow.

-- (SBU) As next steps in helping U.S. institutions take
advantage of these opportunities, Embassy is prepared to
assist Congressman Ed Pastor's office in organizing a
video-conference between Qatar Foundation and Mariposa
Community College, and with Congresswoman Grace Napolitano's
office on a web seminar for interested schools in
California's 38th district.

-- (SBU) Congressman Hinojosa also expressed interest in
organizing field hearings and/or a larger CODEL visit to
Education City to help other members of the Committee on
Education and Labor understand the magnitude of the
multi-billion dollar, long-term investment that Qatar is
making in U.S. educational institutions. Embassy supports
this idea.

------------------------
EDUCATION CITY: IT'S BIG
------------------------

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 DOHA 000841

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

H PLEASE PASS TO OFFICE OF CONGRESSMAN HINJOSA
PLEASE ALSO PASS TO EDUCATION AND LABOR COMMITTEE PERMANENT
STAFF MEMBER (MAJORITY) RICARDO MARTINEZ

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREL KPAO OEXC OREP QA
SUBJECT: CODEL HINOJOSA DISCUSSES BRINGING MORE U.S.
SCHOOLS TO QATAR

--------------
KEY POINTS
--------------

-- Codel Hinojosa's members consulted with deans,
administrators and students of the six U.S. university branch
campuses at Education City, noting that the U.S. university
presence in Qatar was "much larger" than they had originally
thought.

-- Codel members urged Qatar Foundation's president to
explore adding not only an American law school, but also high
schools and community colleges to the mix of educational
options available at Education City.

-- University deans noted that greater flexibility in visa
processing for students, and allowing faculty to continue
National Science Foundation grants while posted to Qatar,
would help smooth out obstacles to greater exchanges between
their home campuses and the branch campuses in Doha.

--------------
COMMENTS
--------------

-- (SBU) This Codel represented important USG engagement with
Qatar in the education sector, something we need more of. As
Qatar seeks to transform itself into a knowledge-based
economy, opportunities for U.S. educational and research
institutions in Qatar will only grow.

-- (SBU) As next steps in helping U.S. institutions take
advantage of these opportunities, Embassy is prepared to
assist Congressman Ed Pastor's office in organizing a
video-conference between Qatar Foundation and Mariposa
Community College, and with Congresswoman Grace Napolitano's
office on a web seminar for interested schools in
California's 38th district.

-- (SBU) Congressman Hinojosa also expressed interest in
organizing field hearings and/or a larger CODEL visit to
Education City to help other members of the Committee on
Education and Labor understand the magnitude of the
multi-billion dollar, long-term investment that Qatar is
making in U.S. educational institutions. Embassy supports
this idea.

--------------
EDUCATION CITY: IT'S BIG
--------------


1. A Codel led by Congressman Ruben Hinojosa, Chairman of the
House Subcommittee on Higher Education, and comprising
Representatives Henry Brown, Mazie Hirono, Grace Napolitano

and Ed Pastor, visited Doha November 12 - 14, spending a day
focused on U.S. universities at Education City.


2. The Codel began their visit by touring the massive 2,500
acre Education City complex, which includes not only the six
U.S. university branch campuses, but also the Al Jazeera
Children's Television Channel. The Codel also viewed
construction sites across the highway of the Qatar
Foundation's convention center, the Qatar Science and
Technology Park, and the Sidra hospital.


3. Texas A & M University at Qatar (TAMU-Q) hosted the Codel
for discussions with U.S. university deans, administrators
and senior administrators from Qatar Foundation, the
organization that governs Education City, including its
president, Dr. Fathy Saoud. The deans briefed the Codel on
their experiences in setting up and operating their schools
in Qatar, with Georgetown School of Foreign Service-Qatar
Dean James Reardon-Anderson noting that, "Universities have
been around for more than a thousand years, but this is the
first time in history that they are attempting to operate an
identical curriculum with the same requirements and standards
far from their shores."

--------------
A REAL AMERICAN EXPERIENCE
--------------


4. The deans stated that, in accordance with their agreements
with the Qatar Foundation, standards for student admission,
curricula, grading, and faculty hiring were exactly the same
as for their home campuses. Most faculty members are from

DOHA 00000841 002 OF 002


the home campuses, and those who have been newly hired have
gone through the same hiring process at the main campus as
any other faculty member would do.


5. These faculty exchanges are important, they said, in
"maintaining our sense of connection with the home campus."
In that regard, according to Carnegie Mellon University -
Qatar Dean Chuck Thorpe, it would be easier to entice
professors to move from Pittsburgh to Doha for a year if they
were allowed to continue their National Science Foundation
grants in Qatar. According to current USG policy, he said,
grants must be terminated when faculty leave the United
States.


6. Echoing that sentiment, Dean Reardon-Anderson said that he
understood the imperatives of securing U.S. borders, but
asked for greater USG flexibility in considering visa
applications from students at U.S. universities in Doha.
"Student exchanges are vital for our institutions," he said.
Congresswoman Mazie Hirono said that she understood the
schools' predicament, and noted that Congress Members would
"do the best we can" to accommodate student travel when
reviewing relevant immigration laws. Congresswoman
Napolitano encouraged schools to reach out to their Congress
Member when a visa application is stalled so that the
congressional office can intervene when appropriate.

--------------
LOOKING TO THE FUTURE
--------------


7. Congressman Hinojosa congratulated Qatar Foundation
President Dr. Fathy Saoud on the progress that has been made
in bringing American educational opportunities to Qatar and,
through the many international students at Education City, to
the broader Middle East. He encouraged Dr. Saoud to consider
expanding the range of institutions to include not only a
U.S. law school, which Qatar Foundation is actively seeking,
but also high schools and community colleges.


8. In order to help educate students who may not be ready or
suited to Education City's elite schools, Rep. Hinojosa said,
"Congressman Ed Pastor has one of the most highly-rated
community colleges in the United States in his district, and
you should talk with them about setting up in Doha." As a
starter, he said, Qatar Foundation could promote student and
teacher exchanges at the high school level, with the goal of
bringing in more U.S. high schools that could prepare
students to feed into Education City schools. (NOTE: The
Michael DeBakey School of Houston opened its doors in Doha in
September, and is currently teaching 44 students. END NOTE)


9. CODEL Hinojosa did not have the opportunity to clear this
cable.
LeBaron