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Jane Stanfield, executive director of UA’s Capstone International
Center, recently met with Dr. Eisa Ali Al Matroushi of United
Arab Emirates University. UA administrators and students
visited the United Arab Emirates to attend a conference and
participate in a joint project with UAEU.
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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – A group of University of Alabama administrators
and students recently visited the United Arab Emirates to attend
a “Women as Global Leaders Conference” at Zayed University
in Dubai, UAE, and participate in a Web-CT-based cultural fluency
project with students at United Arab Emirates University in Al-Ain,
UAE.
The trip came about after Dr. Jane Stanfield, director of UA’s
Capstone International Center, was invited to speak at the conference.
UA students were already communicating with students at United
Arab Emirates University through a Web-based course, and Stanfield
was able to combine the two projects in bringing a delegation to
UAE.
The Web-CT project allows students at UA and UAEU to take part
in a joint course on global cultures. The project features streaming
video interviews and enables students literally half a world apart
to interact via live chat. The project is an outgrowth of a U.S.
State Department Bureau of Public Diplomacy initiative.
The conference, a gathering of 1,000 women from more than 40
countries, centered on women’s leadership roles. “It
looked at how one educates for and about leadership in an increasingly
complex world,” Stanfield said. Representatives included
students, faculty, consultants and representatives from international
groups such as Oxfam.
“Everyone was eager to introduce themselves, share interests
and exchange ideas,” said Dr. Fran Oneal, director of UA’s
International Honors Program and a member of the UA delegation.
“I’ll remember the intermingling of women from six
continents to share ideas, inspiration, information and skills,” Oneal
said. “I’ll remember the words of an Emirati businesswoman
who runs an enterprise of 3,000 employees. Addressing Arab women
in particular, she said ‘Let them know that under the veil,
you have a brain’.”
Lauren Housand, an undergraduate student in UA’s Culverhouse
College of Commerce and Business Administration, was impressed
with both the city of Dubai and the UAE students’ interest
in other cultures. “It almost seemed like a cross between
Las Vegas and Disney World,” she said of the city. “And
the students there were just as interested in learning about our
culture as we were in theirs.”
In addition to Stanfield, Oneal and Housand, the UA delegation
included Martha Morgan, professor of law, and students Karyl Davis,
School of Law; Kristin Davis, College of Arts and Sciences, and
Lauren Oswalt and Genny Maness, both students in the Culverhouse
College of Commerce and Business Administration.
Stanfield said plans are already underway for UA students to
make presentations at next year’s conference in Abu Dhabi
as well as to expand the current Web-CT project. “The unofficial
project motto is ‘many countries – one world.’ The
participation of The University of Alabama in the Women’s
Global Leadership conference is an important first step in making
this motto a reality,” she said.
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