Front entrance at sunset.
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Motto | "My heart is in the work" (Andrew Carnegie) |
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Type | Private, Branch Campus |
Established | 2004 |
President | Subra Suresh |
Provost | Farnam Jahanian |
Dean | Ilker Baybars |
Academic staff
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64 |
Administrative staff
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90 |
Undergraduates | 400 |
Location |
Doha, Qatar 25°18′59″N 51°26′20″E / 25.31639°N 51.43889°ECoordinates: 25°18′59″N 51°26′20″E / 25.31639°N 51.43889°E |
Campus | Multi-versity Education City, 2,400 acres (9.7 km2) |
Colors | Cardinal, Gray, and Tartan Plaid |
Nickname | Tartans, CMU-Q |
Mascot | Scotty the Scottie Dog |
Website | www |
Carnegie Mellon University in Qatar (Arabic: جامعة كارنيجي ميلون في قطر), is one of the branch campuses of Carnegie Mellon University, located in Doha, Qatar. It is Carnegie Mellon's first undergraduate branch campus, is a member of the Qatar Foundation, and began graduating students in May 2008.
Carnegie Mellon Qatar currently has approximately 400 students, 60 faculty and postdoctoral researchers, and 90 staff.
Carnegie Mellon University's campus in Qatar was established in 2004. It was the fourth U.S. higher education institution to establish a campus in Qatar. The establishment of the campuses was spearheaded by Sheikha Moza bint Nasser, the mother of Qatar’s current Emir Tamim bin Hamad al Thani.
Carnegie Mellon Qatar is part of Education City, a campus on the outskirts of Doha that currently houses eight other university campuses from the United States and Europe. Education City’s other institutions include Georgetown University School of Foreign Service, Weill Cornell Medical College, Virginia Commonwealth University, Texas A&M, Northwestern University, HEC Paris, and University College London.
The degrees issued by Carnegie Mellon are the same degrees and curriculum that students receive at the Pittsburgh campus. Undergraduate degrees are offered in Computer Science, Business Administration, Information Systems, Computational Biology, and Biological Sciences (a degree offered in conjunction with Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar).
The campus facilities and upkeep to them is entirely covered by the Qatar Foundation. Carnegie Mellon also received money each year to run the campus and pay faculty. It is estimated that Carnegie Mellon has received between $50 and $60 million per year from Qatar to run the campus. Tuition for the school was $49,610 in 2015.