By Sama Abduljawad

In the wake of Education City’s plans to change its student scholarship criteria and the release of the results for next year’s financial aid applications, students are talking of transferring out of EC universities, as they are unable to afford the university tuition.
The EC student scholarship program is a full scholarship provided to several students throughout the campuses in EC. The criteria for this scholarship however has recently been changed from being based on a student’s GPA to a 100 point system, where the amount of time the student has lived in Qatar, his/her certified contributions to Qatari society and whether the applicant has a parent working for Qatar Foundation or HBKU are also included in the criteria.
But students can also apply for financial aid, a loan-based program provided by HBKU for students who demonstrate financial need. Students must reapply annually, and receive varying amounts of aid depending on their financial situation.
Several students who only received small amounts of financial aid or were rejected all together have applied to universities outside HBKU for the fall semester of 2014.
Afnan Nehela, a freshman at Northwestern University in Qatar, said she would have preferred to continue her education here in Qatar, but cannot if she does not receive additional financial aid.
“I was told that QF is very generous with its financial aid so I had faith that NU-Q’s over- priced tuition [$48,404 or QR176,191) a year] wasn’t something I would have to worry about. Despite the tedious amount of time the application required, I applied for it but only received 20% of the tuition, which resulted in me still having to pay $30,000,” said Nehela.
Nehala is not the only freshman in Qatar Foundation who has been financially affected this year by HBKU’s scholarship changes and financial aid results. Sanjeet Sahni a freshman at Carnegie Mellon University in Qatar spoke of the effect it has had on him.
“Part of the reason I chose to come to Qatar is because of the magnanimity of the Qatar Foundation and its financial aid and scholarship policies,” Sahni said. “Learning that they have altered it and altered those policies to where it may be unfavorable for international students like me is undoubtedly discomforting.”
NU-Q is concerned about the effect these changes could potentially have on the international members of its student body and said they voiced these concerns to officials in QF.
“NU-Q is well aware of the new criteria and has expressed concern with regard to the impact on international students. Representations have been made to appropriate officials of the Qatar Foundation and we will continue to express our concern,” said Paul Reilly, the university’s Director of Media Strategy.
“Like our home campus, we are eager that solutions be found in the financing of higher education for students and their families,” he added.
HBKU failed to respond to any attempts made at contacting them about this issue.
Students in Education City have taken things into their own hands. An online petition against the changes to the scholarship criteria is currently circulating the Internet in hopes of getting 100 supporters.
The author of the petition prefers to remain anonymous because “the petition is not meant to have a face to it.”
“I think it’s best if it anonymously represents the grievances of international students, not just one of them,” the author added.
The petition’s author said that the students do not believe that the changes were made fairly and with enough warning to incoming underclassmen. “I think it’s wrong to give students one message when they are entering university and then take that away from them [once they are admitted].”
A supporter of the petition, Adam Abou-Gad, a freshman at NU-Q, does not think it’s fair that international students who haven’t lived in Qatar are put at an automatic disadvantage with the new scholarship criteria.
“I never heard of a scholarship that basically gives you points for being from a country or born in a country. I found that to be absolutely absurd and that’s why I signed [the petition].”
Both its author and Abou-Gad said that they don’t have high hopes that the petition will change things that have already been announced.
“I did it because I can see that the class of 2017 are going through some really hard times and to show them that someone out there cares for them,” said the author about the petition.
Anonymous • Jul 23, 2014 at 2:23 am
^No
Momin Zahid • Jun 7, 2014 at 1:25 am
I am an international student who just got admitted to CMU. I am still waiting for my financial aid award but this article really worries me. I am really confused about attending CMU now because I don’t want to end up dropping out with a $100,000 loan and no degree to pay it off with. Is Qatar Foundation taking any notice on this issue?
Noora • Apr 26, 2014 at 7:23 pm
I am Queen of the typo, you will find many :p
Noora • Apr 26, 2014 at 7:16 pm
believe*
taking up*
sorry for the typos :).
Noora • Apr 26, 2014 at 7:13 pm
Sorry Adam,
but many scholarships are awarded “for being from a country or born in a country.”
The U.S. is known for handing-out scholarships to minorities.
Find your Ethnicity here and check your options for scholarships: http://colleges.niche.com/scholarships/race/
Don’t beliebe me check the list of ethnicities and nationalities based scholarships at the University of Illinois at Chicago: http://www.uic.edu/depts/oaa/ssp/ethnicbased.html
First people complain that Qatar is treating its long-term residents like visitors/ foreigners, then you demonize Qatar for trying to give the people who call this country home a leg-up?
It is unfair that the international students are having what was told to them change so quickly and without warning, but overall I agree with the direction that the new scholarship system is taking.
International students come to Qatar, they benefit from the country, and they end-up take up spots in EC that could have gone to a long-term resident or a Qatari’s. When they do this it causes the locals and those who see them selves as locals to leave this country and find education elsewhere. When most international students come here they benefit and they leave, a long-term resident stays and fuels the country and the economy.
Education City is here to grow education in Qatar, for Qatar.
This is my opinion it may not be shared with the most, it may be covered in biases, but ultimately i have a right to it.
May the next article be about how people from Doha and those who call Doha home have to leave because too many people are coming in and taking spots that they should have.
And before anyone tells me that’s not fair, it may not be fair to you, but ultimately it is. Every university in the world, and especially in America favor the students that are from there. That is why most colleges and universities in Europe/America differ in tuition fees for those who are from the city/state the institution is in, for those who are from the country and ultimately higher for foreign students. This is how education works, it works by providing education for those in the area and then outwards, not the other way around.
Anonymous • Apr 26, 2014 at 1:43 pm
I have just finished my 2nd year and I’m dropping out because I can’t pay full fees anymore.
Sama Abduljawad • Apr 24, 2014 at 10:58 am
Zahed, those are the struggles of working in the news industry in Qatar. I tried contacting HBKU several times, and we even waited three weeks to publish the story to give them a chance to talk. Writing “HBKU failed to respond” doesn’t mean we did not “pester them for answers, go to their offices and knock on their doors.” It means they refused to answer regardless of all our efforts. Eventually the stories need to get out even though they won’t answer us. I do agree that this in itself is worthy of a story though.
Nayab Malik • Apr 24, 2014 at 10:48 am
Zahed, if we had a riyal for every time someone completely refused to respond, we’d be millionaires by now. Writing about how HBKU doesn’t respond to questions is not a story. If you think that’s journalism, you have the wrong end of the stick.
Our job is to get the story out, in the students’ words, not HBKU’s.
But we hope that one day they will reply to the Daily Q reporters stationed outside their doors. Hopefully!
Zahed Bata • Apr 24, 2014 at 6:02 am
I think the tagline of The Daily Q should be “HBKU failed to respond.” It’s probably the single most common sentence in the publication. One of two things should happen, either pester them for answers, go to their offices and knock on their doors, find them walking around (while knowing the difference between responsible journalism and stalking), or write a story about how they ALWAYS FAIL TO COMMENT/RESPOND. ugh.
Jinny • Apr 23, 2014 at 7:37 pm
Change the scholarship criteria & stop giving out financial aid, and no one bats an eye. Move a student’s poster and everyone loses their minds! :O LOL. Please tell me more about how corrupt the system is.
Haider • Apr 23, 2014 at 7:30 pm
Thank you. Finally some news that matters. This is very unfortunate and hopefully HBKU will be kind enough to respond positively to the needs of the international students, as they make a very heavy portion of the student population in EC, and without them the institution will crumble.