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OSU delegation in Ethiopia

Thursday, January 10, 2013

OSU delegation in Ethiopia to help strengthen higher education

A delegation from OSU is currently visiting two Ethiopian universities to discuss ways to strengthen the development of higher education there. The group will analyze the situation and propose ways to help establish curriculum and develop faculty during an ongoing period of extensive growth in the country’s higher educational institutions.

President Admasu Tsegaye of Addis Ababa University and President Yosef Mamo of Hawassa University extended the joint invitation to the group.

The OSU delegation is composed of Stephan Wilson, dean, college of human sciences; Ed Miller, professor and director of the agricultural international programs, college of agriculture; Dr. Stan Grogg associate dean, OSU Health Sciences Center; Mark Weiser, associate dean, OSU Spears School of Business; Tom Wikle, associate dean, college of arts and sciences and Khaled Gasem, professor, college of engineering.

OSU has a long history of involvement in Ethiopia, which started with the development of Alemaya University.  Alemaya University accepted its first students in 1954 and was dedicated by Emperor Haile Selassie in 1958. Until 1996, Alemaya (now Haramaya) was limited to an agricultural curriculum, but since then has opened its doors to many academic fields. 

Ethiopia has recently gone through a stage of rapid growth in higher education, with more than 33 institutions of higher education now operating in the country. While the institutional growth has been rapid and impressive, much work remains to be done in the establishment of curriculum and faculty development. This is the area where the OSU colleges hope to make a contribution in the coming years.  

The friendship between Oklahoma and Ethiopia has grown steadily over recent years, with President Admasu Tsegaye of Addis Ababa University spending a sabbatical program at OSU in 2012 and 2013. Independent entrepreneur and film maker Mel Tewahade has recently released two documentaries covering the role of OSU as a land grant institution providing assistance in Ethiopia. Tewahade’s hope is that the past will be a guide to the future, and that valuable efforts at development, growth and internationalization will be continued rather than forgotten. 

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