CCQ enrollment statistics: Students pursue core courses
Posted by HCC on February 14, 2013 · Leave a Comment
From the official CCQ site:
Current students are pursuing studies in core courses for university transfer in English, Math, Sciences, Social Sciences and Humanities, as well as short-term workforce certificates and corporate training courses needed for business and industry. Finally, CCQ also provides foundation coursework in English, Math, and Office skills as preparation for future studies or personal enrichment.
Gender Enrollment Statistics – 2012

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Enrollment statistics for CCQ from Fall 2010-2012
Posted by HCC on February 11, 2013 · Leave a Comment
From the official CCQ site:
Current students are pursuing studies in core courses for university transfer in English, Math, Sciences, Social Sciences and Humanities, as well as short-term workforce certificates and corporate training courses needed for business and industry. Finally, CCQ also provides foundation coursework in English, Math, and Office skills as preparation for future studies or personal enrichment.
Enrollment Statistics for CCQ from Fall 2010-2012

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CCQ, HCC seconded employees celebrate National Day at C-Ring campus
Posted by HCC on December 14, 2012 · Leave a Comment
Community College of Qatar and Houston Community College seconded employees at the Community College of Qatar celebrated National Day at the C-Ring campus.
While in Houston, Executive Director Gigi Do, Former U.S. Ambassador of Qatar, and Commissioner Jim Fonteno joined the Qatar Consulate office in Houston to celebrate this important day at the Houston Hilton Galleria Hotel.
“HCC is proud to continue our successful third year with CCQ,” said OII Executive Director Gigi Do said.

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CCQ Newsletter: Vantage Point (Fall 2012)
Posted by HCC on October 7, 2012 · Leave a Comment
Vantage Point, the Community College of Qatar’s newsletter, is pleased to formally welcome all new and returning students to the C-Ring and West Bay campuses. With a new school year comes many new and original experiences, including never before seen courses such as the Introduction to Fiction class which focuses on the use of monsters, vampires, and ghosts. More science and business classes should also increase students’ opportunities.
Additionally, the Community College has paired with Qatar’s General Directorate of Customs and the government of Australia to create a program aimed at educating customs employees. Our exclusive, on CCQ’s new Associate’s of Applied Science Degree looks into this initiative and explains how two countries 10,500 kilometers apart have joined hands in this new venture. Most promising of all, new faculty, staff, and administrative hires from around the world will help to broaden CCQ’s reach as the college moves forward into its third year.
Download printable version of CCQ Newsletter: Vantage Point (Fall 2012) (PDF)
Message from the President
Dear CCQ Students,
It’s a new year… It’s a fresh start. That’s what the Fall Term is offering all of you.
So, WELCOME to the CCQ New Year!
Did you know that the CCQ is now 950 students strong? That’s a phenomenal growth that reflects how much the CCQ has become part of the community of Qatar… as well as the community’s response by entrusting your education and your future direction in this young but very dynamic and forward-looking institution of learning.
For the new students, this Fall Term is truly a fresh start. But for the returning students, it is a fresh start to find more ways to keep improving their skills, having more friends and enjoying their college life. I am pretty sure that you all have summer stories to share with one another as you see your friends again and definitely make new ones.
Likewise, you will see your previous instructors and probably be in their classes again. There will be new classes with new people who could have a lot in common with you. But definitely you will be meeting new faculty members who are just as excited as you to start the learning journey together. We have a highly qualified team of teachers/instructors/professors who can surely enrich your classroom experiences.
You will also experience new things around the College such as new courses, new facilities and renewed way of doing things to serve your needs better. The college has added many new courses this academic year, so it is a great opportunity for many of you to study subjects of your interest, or others that will prepare you for your university in the future.
This is your academic home for the next few months. Settle down, be at ease and assured that the College is here to help and partner with you. Education is a right and a privilege.
You are most welcome to express yourself in an acceptable and respectful manner and within the prescribed guidelines that the College has set out for your benefits.
So, without much ado, I wish all of you, my students and my colleagues, all the best for this Academic Year. May your enthusiasm and desire to reach your goals rise as you encounter challenging situations and as you turn them around to your advantage and succeed every step of the way.
-Acting President Ibrahim Saleh Al Naimi Ph.d.
Eight Community College of Qatar Students Receive Houston Community College Diplomas
The Community College of Qatar held a small ceremony to confer Houston Community College diplomas on eight students. The eight recipients, members of CCQ’s first graduating class, successfully completed all the requirements needed to obtain the HCC diplomas.
All 11 members of the CCQ 2012 inaugural graduating class are now attending various universities in Qatar and in the United States including Qatar University, Carnegie Mellon University-Qatar and Woodbury University in Los Angeles, California.
In his commencement address, CCQ’s Acting President, Dr. Ibrahim Saleh Al-Naimi, congratulated the students for their efforts and success. “Two years ago, in September 2010, we welcomed the first batch of students to the Community College of Qatar. On 15 May 2012, 6 young ladies and 5 young men marched up the stage to receive their CCQ diplomas. We proudly celebrated Qatar’s inaugural community college graduates. With CCQ degrees already in hand, eight of those eleven graduates decided to complete a few more courses in the summer and are now receiving their second diplomas”, he said. Dr. Al-Naimi also extended “his heartfelt gratitude and admiration to the college faculty and staff for their hard work and unwavering commitment to providing quality education to our students”.
In his welcome address, CCQ Acting Dean Dr Butch Herod congratulated the students on the completion of their HCC degrees and on their recent admission to universities.
Dr. Art Tyler, Deputy Chancellor and COO of Houston Community College, travelled from Houston to award the HCC diplomas to the students on behalf of Chancellor Mary Spangler and the HCC board of trustees. Dr. Tyler congratulated the students and he recognized their dedication and hard work in completing two college degrees within two years. He also wished them well in their educational and career journeys.
”Houston Community College is our partner institution with whom we share the same purpose of opening up opportunities for young men and women of Qatar to pursue lifelong learning and further education and achieve their dreams so that they are able to serve this country with what they do best,” said Dr. Al-Naimi.
CCQ announces the new Associate of Applied Science (AAS) degree in Customs Management
So what exactly does a Community College in Qatar have in common with a University in Canberra, Australia? In addition to general education, community colleges, like universities, have the ability to develop customized programs aimed at the betterment of new employment programs. With the tide changing and more educational programs being tailored to specific areas of employment, CCQ’s new Department of Workforce Education and Community Development has implemented a innovative program geared towards Qatari men and women interested in customs. Dr. Abdulnassir Al-Tamimi, who is now the Associate Dean of the Department of Workforce Education and Community Development, explains how this new program came into being.
“We were approached by the General Directorate of Customs to build a tailor made custom’s program that would be recognized around the world,” he said. “A program that would not only serve the state of Qatar, but with future goals of serving customs authorities in the Gulf and around the world. We initially looked for institutions in the US that we could partner with but could not find any that offers a degree in Customs Management. Luckily, we found what can argua-bly be the most recognized institute for programs modified to customs and to customs management- the Center for Customs and Excise Studies at the University of Canberra in Australia. The Center’s CEO is one of the top officials for the World Customs Organization (WCO) and will not only help us build a strong and well recognized program, but will assist the college, as part of the partnership agreement, in getting the program accredited by the essentials of customs management and border control. Upon completion of the AAS students would be able to transfer to a university to complete another two years of education and graduate with a Bachelor’s of Arts in Applied Technology. The University of Houston in Houston, Texas is being considered as a candidate for the transfer students.
Currently, 40 students are enrolled who are sponsored employees of the General Directorate of Customs in Qatar. The agency has stated they are willing to hire interested CCQ students and will sponsor a limited number in exchange for the students agreeing to work for the General Directorate of Customs after graduation. If interested, please contact Ms. Mariam Al-Barazi, CCQ’s Scholarship and Sponsorship Advisor, at 4401-1372.
This is the first of many new AAS programs to be developed at CCQ in the coming years that will help meet the workforce needs of the State of Qatar. Dr. Al-Tamimi (Associate Dean) is currently collaborating with the Ministry of Interior to implement an AAS in Telecommunications Technology as well as an AAS in Early Childhood Education requested by the Supreme Education Council.
C-Ring Club Rush
The annual club rush began on September 12th with faculty, staff, and student sponsors promoting their unique organizations in the hope of recruiting new members to help build and broaden their club’s versatility. The event was held at C-Ring’s cafeteria where club sponsors set up tables with their club name, sign-up sheets, and anything they could think of to bring attention to their organization. The Photography Club, sponsored by English Professor Bernadette Russo and assisted by ESOL Professor Bryan Corbin, made use of multiple cameras and lenses to excite students about the opportunities the organization offers. When asked about student interest, Professor Russo offered, “The rush was a huge success for us. We now have more members, and the students will be doing more this year than last.”
The C-Ring Student Government was present and came prepared with miniature cupcakes and bundles of brightly colored balloons, both of which worked well at gaining student attention and tempting other club sponsors. Students of Professor Barbara Loggins made use of the walls behind their table by posting very tasteful banner and a roll-up sign specially made for the occasion. Others used projectors and laptops to display what they were offering and what things new members could do as part of the club.
Ultimately, many of the clubs were successful at collecting new members. Previously established clubs, such as the Business Club, had no trouble in collecting new members, while newer clubs also picked up some interest. Each new member will have the opportunity to participate in club activities, to plan events, and to vote for their club leadership.
Student clubs are centered on common interests and can be used by students to help improve their skill set prior to graduation. Many students use these clubs as an opportunity to prepare for the careers they wish to pursue or simply to add to their CV. While no club can be said to be better or worse than another, it is important that students consider what their interests are before joining. A student may still be able to join a group later in the semester if the club sponsor agrees. To get into contact with a specific club, contact Mashael Al-Mohammadi, Student Activities Coordinator.
Community College of Qatar’s Newest Stars
The Community College of Qatar is happy to welcome its newest Faculty and Staff to its hallowed halls. Nearly every department has a new face. Let’s meet them!
Administration:
President’s Office: Dr. Said A Mubarak Law Expert
Operations: Nahed Mohamed Korshy, Service Worker
Human Resources:
Noor Riyas, Receptionist
Ahlam Aiedhhz Reshidi, Office Assistant
Mohammed Ali Ah, Office Assistant
Student Services:
Cheryl Johnson, Associate Dean of Student Services
Admissions: Makeba Brown, Registration/Enrollment Associate Student Activities: Sara Al Sherouqi, Student Activities Officer Counseling & Advising: Chameeta Denton, C-Ring Counselor
Information Technology:
Systems Administrator: Adnan Bleik
Systems Analyst: Wissam Maadarani
Instruction:
Dr. Robert Ford, Associate Dean of Instruction
Math: Fearase Al-Neimi and Sahar Saleh Computer Science and Business: Saman Desilva
English: Camille Alexander
ESOL: Carol Lafferty, Carmella Payne, James Herst, BJ Jumnadass, Ravathy Ratnasekar, Bryan Corbin, Fe Liza Bencosme, Deborah Dixon Ali, Cecelia (CC) King, Bridgette Dennis, Joseph Mitchell, Marvis Kilgore, and Bratislav Stojic.
Library: Reem Abdul Qader Al-Ansari, Library Assistant

Congrats: Scott Gehman & Bernadette Russo
Please join us in congratulating two of CCQ’s finest professionals.
First, Professor Bernadette Russo on presenting her paper, “Shackles of a Distant Self and the Damning Complicit.” Professor Russo read her work at the “Making Sense of Madness” conference at Mansfield College on the campus of Oxford University. This prestigious multi-disciplinary conference included presenters from around the world. Scholars in the fields of psychiatry, psychology, anthropology, social work, post colonialism, literature, philosophy, and theology presented papers, gave seminars, and led discussions questioning the construction and role of madness in society.
Oxford University is one of the most venerable institutions of higher education in the world. The fact that CCQ was represented among this gathering of celebrated thinkers is a great testament to Profes-sor Russo’s intellectual and scholarly abilities.
And Second, congratulations to our colleague Scott Gehman, whose third musical production for the Chinese government, Metropolis, will debut in the city of Shenzhen (China’s fourth largest city) in early December 2012. Scott wrote the music for this musical which is about Shenzhen’s meteoric rise from a small fishing village in the 1970s to a city of 14 million people. Shenzhen is China’s electronics industry capital with Apple Computers manufacturing many of its products there as well.
Shenzhen’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism commissioned the musical last year. It is a Broadway style production in both English and Mandarin and was initiated to help promote the city’s global profile in hopes of continuing to attract international business and industry. So, please join us in congratulating Scott and Bernadette on their wonderful, creative enterprises.
Have you met?
Bryan Corbin: He comes to us from Southern California with a bachelor’s degree in Communications, a master’s degree in Professional Writing, and a TEFL certificate. When not teaching or planning lessons, Bryan is working on a second graduate degree in Adult Education from Colorado State University. He has been married for one year, and previously taught ESL in China and South Korea. In his free time he enjoys kayaking, hiking, writing, traveling, and snapping photographs of Doha. He has traveled to every continent and is thrilled to be working in this beautiful nation and learning about life in the Middle East.
Filed under CCQ Newsletter: Vantage Point, Dean and Faculty Corner, News from HCC, Success Stories · Tagged with CCQ, Gigi Do, HCC, HCC in Qatar, Houston Community College, Qatar, Vantage Point
Gulf Times: Eight community college students receive diplomas
Posted by HCC on September 20, 2012 · Leave a Comment
From Gulf Times:
The Community College of Qatar has awarded the first Houston Community College diplomas to eight students. The eight diploma recipients are all members of CCQ’s first graduating class. More details.
From HCC:
“This has been a true labor of love for everyone at HCC to deliver this very important global mission for the people of Qatar”, said Ms. Gigi Do, who is also the Houston Community College Program Director for the Community College of Qatar. Ms. Do has been with the CCQ program since the beginning of signing of the HCC/CCQ agreement.
The Community College of Qatar (CCQ), under the auspices of the Supreme Education Council (SEC), selected Houston Community College (HCC) to develop the community college model to meet the educational needs of Qatar under the educational reform initiatives of the Qatari government.
HCC was chosen from among eight U.S. community colleges to develop a custom curriculum and institute a fully operational community college by the fall of 2010.
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The Peninsula: CCQ students receive Houston diplomas
Posted by HCC on September 18, 2012 · Leave a Comment
From the Peninsula:
DOHA: The Community College of Qatar (CCQ) held a ceremony to confer the first Houston Community College diplomas to eight students. The eight recipients, members of CCQ’s first graduating class, successfully completed all the requirements needed to obtain the HCC diplomas. All the 11 members of the CCQ 2012 inaugural graduating class are now attending various universities in Qatar and in the United States including Qatar University, Carnegie Mellon University-Qatar and Woodbury University in Los Angeles, California. Complete text of The Peninsula article.
From HCC:
“This has been a true labor of love for everyone at HCC to deliver this very important global mission for the people of Qatar”, said Ms. Gigi Do, who is also the HCC Program Director for the Community College of Qatar. Ms. Do has been with the CCQ program since the beginning of signing of the HCC/CCQ agreement.
The Community College of Qatar (CCQ), under the auspices of the Supreme Education Council (SEC), selected Houston Community College (HCC) to develop the community college model to meet the educational needs of Qatar under the educational reform initiatives of the Qatari government. HCC was chosen from among eight U.S. community colleges to develop a custom curriculum and institute a fully operational community college by the fall of 2010.
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Houston Community College helps Community College of Qatar to begin its third academic year
Posted by HCC on September 15, 2012 · Leave a Comment
Houston Community College assisted Community College of Qatar to begin its third academic year of 2012-2013.
“We are proud of our accomplishments thus far at CCQ — more than 940 Qatari students enrolled for the fall semester of 2012, and more than 80 HCC seconded faculty and staff are currently working at CCQ.”
– Gigi Do
HCC Office of International Initiatives Executive Director
HCC Program Director for Community College of Qatar



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Academic Year in Review: Community College of Qatar announces 11 graduates
Posted by HCC on September 6, 2012 · Leave a Comment
Dr. Mary Spangler, HCC Chancellor, Dr. Art Tyler, Deputy Chancellor, and Gigi Do, Executive Director, joined CCQ in Doha, Qatar, on May 15 to congratulate 11 CCQ graduates. It has been almost two years since the opening day of CCQ in September 12, 2010, and HCC since has hired over 75 HCC expats to serve CCQ in the capacity of administration, faculty, and staff.
“This has been a true labor of love for everyone at HCC to deliver this very important global mission for the people of Qatar”, said Ms. Gigi Do, who is also the HCC Program Director for the Community College of Qatar. Ms. Do has been with the CCQ program since the very beginning of signing of the HCC/CCQ agreement.
For complete coverage of Houston Community College Commencement 2012, check out www.hccs.edu/graduation2012.

Gigi Do, Executive Director of International Initiatives and HCC Program Director for CCQ, with Dr. Butch Herod, Dean of CCQ – enjoy a light moment before the first CCQ graduation ceremony.
The Community College of Qatar accepted student registrations for testing and orientation for classes at the new campus buildings in Doha for September 2010 enrollment.
Online coverage of graduation
• Alarab • Gulf Times • Raya
2012 Graduates
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General Administration of Qatar Customs, CCQ collaborate on teaching program
Posted by HCC on August 21, 2012 · Leave a Comment
The General Administration of Qatar Customs and the Community College of Qatar have signed a
Memorandum of Understanding to set up a teaching program.
“HCC’s Office of International Initiatives proudly introduces the new workforce program established at CCQ,” said Gigi Do, executive director of HCC’s Office of International Initiatives.
Here’s the official announcement:
The General Administration of Qatar Customs and the Community College of Qatar, signed a
Memorandum of Understanding to set up a teaching programme for Customs staff of the General
Administration of Qatar Customs under the title of “Associate Diploma in Applied Science /
Majoring in Customs Sciences” in order to boost the scientific competence of the staff and to
provide exceptional Customs Services to the pool of clients. The first party was represented by
H.E. Mr. Ahmed bin Ali Al Mohannadi General Director of Qatar’s General Administration of
Customs, whereas the second party was represented by Prof. Dr. Ibrahim bin Saleh Al Nuaimi,
Acting Chairman of the Community College. More details.
• Printable version of announcement. (PDF)
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CCQ Newsletter: Vantage Point (Summer 2012)
Posted by HCC on July 3, 2012 · Leave a Comment
CCQ’s Shining Moment
With the college’s first graduation commencement, CCQ’s moment in the sun has finally arrived. Many students now look forward to when they too will collect their diplomas on the ceremonial stage. Inside our summer issue we will take you deeper into that historic event and reveal some of the changes to expect in 2013. Additionally, we will highlight the many activities, events, and works happening at CCQ. Though the trek has been an adventure and there are still a great many things to do, CCQ’s future is bright.

The idea of establishing a community college in Qatar was in the minds of many citizens of this country because it proved to be an important piece needed to complete the educational system of the State.
Through a clear vision and directives from Her Highness Sheikha Moza Bint Nasser, our work began in 2008 to establish the “Community College of Qatar;” a comprehensive, open-access college that would provide educational opportunities, previously unavailable, to the sons and daughters of Qatar.
In less than two years since this honored directive, the College successfully opened its doors and provided the highest standard of education and quality services in collaboration with a distinctive team from Houston Community College. Today, we are here to witness the first graduating class of this young college, where everyone stood on the promise of the “Covenant” to graduate the first students after two years of rigorous study at the Community College of Qatar.
Her highness Sheikha Moza Bint Nasser once said, “These graduates are our real capital for the future. We all are looking forward to the stage of creativity and innovation man-made by a Qatari.”
With this small constellation of young graduates, who believed in the importance of being part of this college, we are in the process of sharing with other educational institutions here in Qatar, the path for a brighter future for all Qatari citizens.
The Community College of Qatar will remain devoted to its mission of opening its doors to all Qatari citizens and to graduating cohorts in the upcoming years. In addition, CCQ is working to provide specialized two year programs that would serve the Qatari labor market such as a “Telecommunications Program” in cooperation with the Ministry of Interior, a “Customs Management Program” in collaboration with the Customs Authority, and a “Media ad Communications Program” with Al Jazeera Center for Media Training and Development.
The college is developing its Strategic Plan to become one of the key educational institutions in the State of Qatar. The CCQ Strategic Plan’s major focus is on achieving the Qatar National Vision 2030 by providing the nation with qualified and well-trained human resources to enter the labor market, or pursue higher education in local or international university, as stated in the 2011 Emiri Decree No. (52), which established the college. In addition, CCQ is currently working to accommodate all Qatari students applying to the college for the 2012/2013 academic year.
On this occasion, allow me to express my sincere gratitude to the Supreme Education Council for the unlimited support they have provided to our young College. On behalf of the Faculty and Staff, I would like to thank all the parents who believed in CCQ and to the Qatari society that welcomed the College enthusiastically. Without everyone’s support, CCQ would not have been able to accomplish its goals and mission of providing first class to our beloved homeland.
We proudly congratulate our valued graduates.
Building Bridges: Munira Al-Thani’s Graduation Speech
Your Highness, Sheika Moza, President Ibrahim, Dean Herod, members of the faculty, Distinguished Guests, fellow students, and parents, Good Evening.
First, I would like to congratulate all my fellow students who are here this evening to be honored as the first graduating class of the Community College of Qatar. I am very proud and honored to be here before you this evening to acknowledge and celebrate this momentous occasion. There is an enormous sense of excitement and pride this evening, which I am sure all of you feel. In many ways we have all come to not only laud our respective student accomplishments and excellence, but the success of our college, for which we must also esteem the CCQ faculty, for without them, none of this would have been possible. We thank them most profusely.
I would also like to thank our families for just how much you have done for us. To love, support, and nurture a child is something remarkable, and now to see all of us as young, accomplished adults is something I am sure makes you very proud. I also believe that all of us owe a great debt of appreciation to Her Highness Sheika Moza, who has always been there for us a mentor and role model; someone who values the importance of education and who already has done so much to secure Qatar’s future by creating institutions of higher learning, such as CCQ, which will benefit all Qataris for generations to come.
As she has stated on many occasions, “Our aim was, and will always be, to build, prepare and form Qatari individuals, and allow them to reach their maximum potential and skills by considering them to be the backbone and the object of sustainable national and human development.”
As I stand here before you this evening, I must say that I’m proud of myself, proud of my fellow students for the results and efforts we have all put forth these past two years, and that I am deeply humbled but thrilled that you have collectively given me the chance to speak before you and represent you as fellow graduates.
And to all of you, it has been a pleasure walking with you along the CCQ bridge toward this great day. Though for many of us it was two years of trepidation, it was more like two years of excitement, fulfillment, and illumination. For many of us, CCQ represented a second chance at higher education and I am sure that I speak for all of us when I say thank you to all the faculty and staff at CCQ for giving us this opportunity to pursue our education and our dreams. Let me assure you that the education and friendships we have forged here at CCQ are precious gifts that we will keep forever.
So Congratulations and I wish all of you exciting new bridges to cross!
Graduation from a Student’s Perspective
By Mai Al-Rashid
“Graduation” This is the word that will summarize all of our hard work and stressful feelings on every exam. It is a great moment that each student will work hard to reach. This year, CCQ graduated its first class in the spring semester, and I was there to experience it. I am a member in the photography club, and we took the pictures that were used in the graduation ceremony.
It was Saturday at 9:00 in the morning when our photography club met in the college for a graduation photo shooting. We took some pictures for the graduation theme, and I was the model! Professor Bernadette Russo (Photography Club leader) gave me the gown to wear.
As soon as I wore it, I felt charmed. I cannot describe how I felt that time because it was really a magical moment. “It is my graduation day”, I told myself. It was a magical gown. Even though I am not graduating this year, we experienced it in the photos, and we became a member of the graduation ceremony through our pictures. We used the C-Ring campus to create the photos. We used everything in it from the auditorium to papers. Some pictures were shot in the auditorium, because it would look like it is a graduation hall. The auditorium was full of amazing posters that were posted on the wall like Sheikha Moza’s picture. Sheikha Moza’s picture represents the vision of the college, so we took some pictures using it. Also there was a huge flag of Qatar, and there was a banner that has some inspirational words on it. As a photographer, we have to take advantage of every small thing in any place. In the auditorium, we tried to take a picture that showed me as a graduate and the flag with the banner. This picture shows a lot; it shows that this is a Qatari college first, and the words on the banner show that the graduate will start their way to the future from that graduation moment.
As we were finishing the graduation pictures, we thought about taking pictures for the gown alone with putting a paper as a certificate. Professor Russo suggested using her office as a studio to take this picture. The gown was put on the table in a special way, where it would be clear if we photographed it. The materials were ready, but we felt that something was missing. We took one picture to check. The picture was not representing our college; it did not show that it belonged to CCQ. At the end, we decided to write “CCQ” on the paper, and it was an expressive picture. This picture is posted in one of the banners in the campus.
Seeing our work in the campus and in the graduation ceremony meant a lot to us. We were very happy and proud that our pictures were used in public and everyone saw it. I did not graduate yet and I did not attend the graduation ceremony physically, but I attended it with my emotion and my effort. It was enough for me to make my pictures involved in the ceremony, and it is enough for me to see our pictures everyday in the banners on the campus. As Cynthia Kersey once said, “Believe in yourself and there will come a day when others will have no choice but to believe with you.”
Old West Bay Campus
By Gregory Twidal
West Bay Campus stands as a monument to those first few Faculty, Staff, and students who settled the first community college in Qatar. Many difficulties awaited them, including communicating across cultures and languages while creating a kind of institution never before attempted in Qatar. Such hard work, in many ways, resembles the founding of towns and businesses on the American frontier. They were asked to build from the ground up and make the best of what was available.

In essence, our historical graduation signifies a turning point – the work done by those few will invariably benefit many more to come. Yet, two full academic years after its opening, challenges continue to surround West Bay. The biggest and most persistent problem is student parking. The campus’ main student parking lot was demolished, fenced, and is now occupied by huge gravel piles and massive building equipment. Now, more like the remnants of an old western town, the men’s campus sits squarely in the middle of a construction site with the skeletons of unfinished buildings encircling the campus in every direction.
However, much like the pioneers who came before them, the current West Bay CCQ students are pushing forward. Parking in what room is available and along the fence line that now borders where the parking lot once stood, the men of West Bay have banded together to continue their education in the prospect of a better future. West Bay Faculty and Staff, the acting “town folk” of the campus, are working hard to continue the strong academic tradition established in September 2010. Professor Valorie Gehman hosts volleyball practice at a court less than a mile from campus. Bina Benavides encourages West Bay students to create clubs and builds interest in student-run organizations. The English Café continues to grow at West Bay and is now meeting off-site to encourage more attendees with a more inviting atmosphere. Attendance at the Learning Center is also seeing an increase as more students are beginning to see the benefits of the services offered. “West Bay students are in search of building more a community at CCQ. They defi-nitely have a passion to get involved,” states Bina Benavides.
In short, the pioneering spirit is alive and well at West Bay. With this kind of dedication among Faculty, Staff, and students, it can become more than a monument of triumphs made, but a capital for future success and opportunity in the country of Qatar.
My Experience Presenting at Qatar TESOL
By Claudia Pena
As I stood in front of a group of colleagues representing colleges and universities from across Qatar, I cleared my throat and smiled. The several familiar faces of Renata Russo, Cheryl Buxamusa, Linda Bolet, Nereida Llonch, Johanna Campbell and Marina Shpilberg were all smiling back at me.

There were, however, about a dozen unfamiliar faces in the crowd— people I had never met. The room was divided and panic set in as I absolutely forgot my speech. At that instant, I made a much deeper connection, not to my participants, but instead to my students. I thought, ”So this is how it feels! There is a lot more I have to take into consideration when I ask my ESOL students to present to the class.” Thus, this experience made me more empathetic and sensitive to my student’s situation.
Here are brief, impactful lessons I learned while presenting at Qatar TESOL 2012:
1. Do not underestimate the power of positive thinking and speaking. I could not thank Professor Nereida enough as she smiled and went into an ode of positive reinforcement. What was really fascinating about her actions was that others, who did not know me, smiled and relaxed a bit more. I noticed they became more apt to participate and later contribute to the group’s effort. I never truly realized something as simple as starting a conference with positivity can contribute to creating a successful learning environment.
2. Value everyone’s time and experience. I was blessed to have the guidance of someone who has been in education for over twenty years coach me through all the stages of my presentation, but standing before a group of wall-to-wall peers was unnerving. I wondered how many of the audience members surpassed my education or experience. “I am here for a reason, and I can learn as much from them as they can learn from me,” I realized. This made it much easier to stop, breathe and wait longer for a response from the group. This interaction is similar in our classrooms. Our students come with knowledge, depth, and a variety of experiences which they need to express, as well as allowing others to express during their presentation.
3. Last, feedback is essential. Think about any audience, full of students or educators. There are those who do not like to put things down on paper—thus, several participants came over to me at the end and shared their comments. It is not always easy to look at a person and offer constructive criticism. It is much easier for some to “face the paper” and remain anonymous. In our classrooms, this can be as simple as a show of colored index cards (red, yellow and green), thumbs up or down, or a number of fingers to indicate comprehension, just to name a few. We must remember this feedback is to benefit the presenter. As an educator, feedback checks our flexibility and commitment to quality education. As a student, it gives them a way to grow and self-reflect.
“It was an amazing experience and I thank everyone— faculty, staff and students, who made this workshop a possibility; moreover, I feel that our colleagues successfully represented The Community College of Qatar by showing their support, dedication and professionalism.”
Filed under CCQ Newsletter: Vantage Point, Media Room, News from HCC, Success Stories · Tagged with CCQ, CCQ Newsletter, Community College of Qatar, Gigi Do, HCC, Houston Community College, Qatar, Vantage Point
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