University opens in Kosovo: new school helps to rebuild Kosovo.Kosovo might seem as an unlikely location for a university, considering the region's notoriety for ethnic cleansing ethnic cleansing The creation of an ethnically homogenous geographic area through the elimination of unwanted ethnic groups by deportation, forcible displacement, or genocide. , economic depression and political instability. But Rochester Institute of Technology (NY), which previously started two other universities in Eastern Europe Eastern Europe The countries of eastern Europe, especially those that were allied with the USSR in the Warsaw Pact, which was established in 1955 and dissolved in 1991. , doesn't seem to think so. In fact, just a few months ago, RIT RIT, n See therapy, regenerative injection. launched the American University American University, at Washington, D.C.; United Methodist; founded by Bishop J. F. Hurst, chartered 1893, opened in 1914. It was at first a graduate school; an undergraduate college was opened in 1925. Programs provide for student research at many government institutions. in Kosovo, located in Pristina. The university's first freshman class of 70 is being taught in English by mostly American faculty. "We didn't choose them, they chose us," says Wiley McKinzie, dean of RIT's college of applied science and technology The College of Applied Science and Technology (CAST) is one of the original colleges of the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT). CAST encompasses 20% of RIT's enrollment. The college was the first New York technical school to offer an associate's degree in Applied Science. . "The Kosovars want to build their own infrastructures--they're establishing all kinds of social, economic and political structures, including a new university. They're trying to find ways to make their society a more viable one." The university specializes in business, economics, computers and the application of management and technology with economic and manufacturing challenges in mind. Initially, students are earning their two-year associate degrees, but eventually the goat is to offer four-year degrees too. The school accepts anyone who lives in Kosovo, though the freshman class primarily consists of Albanians. "We hope that other ethnicities, such as the Serbians will also come to the school," McKinzie says. "We've seen a tot of mixing of ethnicities in our Croatian university. So there is hope." |
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