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HCC -- hiring Americans only?
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veiledsentiments



Joined: 20 Feb 2003
Posts: 17644
Location: USA

PostPosted: Wed Jan 23, 2013 3:29 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I know of a couple teachers who have joined lately and are happy with the situation.

VS
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blastermill



Joined: 30 Aug 2011
Posts: 101

PostPosted: Fri Apr 05, 2013 1:58 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

This is now a multinational outfit to reflect the true scene of English language teaching in the world. Read the statistics - over 90%^ of EFL teachers are not native speakers and that's as it should be. Students need to adjust to various accents and dialects of English - that's the way it is. Just watch the newcasters on Al Jazeera - Australian, British, American, South African, Nigerian, Somali, Egyptian, etc. etc. etc. That's the real world - English is now spoken by many people with many accents and a good learning environment should have a diverse population of teachers - both natives and non natives - that's the way to go!
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battleshipb_b



Joined: 14 Dec 2006
Posts: 189

PostPosted: Tue Jun 11, 2013 1:10 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

http://chronicle.com/blogs/global/houston-community-college-struggles-with-project-in-qatar/32114
THE TEXAS TRIBUNE; Houston Community College Helps Expand Educational Options in Qatar
DOHA, Qatar -- Ahmed Mohamed al-Hassan hit an educational glass ceiling. He needed a higher-education degree to move up the ladder at Aspire Logistics, the company that manages Doha's massive sports complex. Although he had graduated from high school a decade before, his grade-point average was too low to enroll at Qatar University.
''There were no options,'' said Mr. Hassan, 31. ''If I wanted to study, I would have to leave my job.''That changed in September 2010, however, when Qatar partnered with Houston Community College and opened the Community College of Qatar, the country's first such college. Now, Mr. Hassan is the first in his family to go to college, mostly taking night classes as he continues to work full time.On May 15, less than two years after C.C.Q. opened, 11 students became the country's inaugural community college graduates. The partnership had a rocky beginning, but leaders of both colleges hope the graduation ceremony is the first of many.
The idea to start a community college had been discussed in Qatar since the mid-2000s, said Ibrahim Saleh al-Naimi, acting president of C.C.Q. There has been an increased focus on higher-education standards, and some Qataris found it difficult to get into universities. ''Many students had practically no chance to be admitted to Qatar University or, for that matter, Education City,'' said Mr. Naimi, referring to a Doha campus that has branches of elite foreign universities.But the country had no experience with community colleges. ''They had hats, but no cattle, as we say in Texas,'' said Mary Spangler, chancellor of H.C.C., one of the largest community colleges in the United States. After a request for proposals yielded eight options, H.C.C. was chosen as the partner for creating the institution.H.C.C. was chosen in part because it has been one of the most active community colleges internationally, aiding the accreditation efforts of institutions in Vietnam, Brazil and Saudi Arabia. But no arrangement is as complicated as the one with C.C.Q., through which H.C.C. provides the faculty and staff members to teach their curriculum in Doha.
Unlike Texas A&M University's Doha campus, which is overseen by a private foundation and is expected to replicate the College Station campus, C.C.Q. is overseen by a Qatar government ministry, the Supreme Education Council. Consequently, policies are more prone to abrupt changes.The institutions signed a five-year, $45 million contract in May 2010. Ms. Spangler said the endeavor does not cost the H.C.C. administration any money -- under the contract, any expenses are expected to be reimbursed by the education council. Additionally, H.C.C. will receive a 10 percent fee for its services -- a projected $4.5 million over five years.
''Instead of giving away our expertise, we're making money from it,'' Ms. Spangler said. To date, H.C.C. officials said, they have received $923,414.When the college opened in 2010, it offered associate's degrees in arts, science and applied science. There were 304 students, all Qataris. The number of students has more than doubled, but the school has yet to take advantage of the country's substantial expatriate market.Art Tyler, the H.C.C. deputy chancellor, said opening a college in such a tight time frame would have been impossible in the United States. ''I defy anybody to try to do that not only in their own backyard, but do it at arm's reach,'' he said.Although the college was up and running quickly, it promptly encountered unforeseen difficulties. The Supreme Education Council selects the president and the dean of the college, and its first dean clashed with the H.C.C. administration. Ms. Spangler said there was ''a tug of war over every single shred of information'' and ultimately those differences caused C.C.Q. to go off track on its efforts to become -- as H.C.C. already is -- accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, whose seal of approval is often considered a critical quality control for transferring credits. ''If we had started off and kept along the path that the contract identified for accreditation, we would be two years along that path,'' Ms. Spangler said. ''For whatever reason, that's not what happened.''
This alarmed students who thought they would be graduating with degrees from H.C.C., which ultimately was not the case; their degrees are from C.C.Q. ''I think a lot of students feel that if they have the H.C.C. degree, it will open many doors and they will get into many universities,'' Mr. Naimi said, ''where now they are struggling to get into one or two universities. Gigi Do, the executive director in H.C.C.'s office of international initiatives, said the decision to continue pursuing accreditation rests with the administration at C.C.Q. Last fall, Butch Herod, who previously served as dean of H.C.C.'s Northwest College in Houston, was brought in to take over as acting dean in Qatar. Administrators said the partnership got back on track as he began addressing concerns. ''I found a college that was beginning its second year of operation, and that says it all,'' Mr. Herod said.


http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A05EFDB163EF934A15756C0A9649D8B63
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