The National - News

GOOD DEEDS PAY OFF FOR STUDENT WITH ROBOTICS CAREER DREAM

▶ Thanks to a scholarshi­p and an inspiring Jordanian octogenari­an, Aya Abu Zaid can continue studying

- KHALED YACOUB OWEIS Correspond­ent

The cost of tuition was a major worry for Jordanian student Aya Abu Zaid until she won a scholarshi­p last year from a foundation started by a retired businessma­n who was the first in his family to go to university.

“The tuition [fee] was a disaster,” says Aya, 20, a third-year student of computer engineerin­g at the state-run Jordan University for Science and Technology in the northern city of Irbid.

Her scholarshi­p from the Kapadia Education Foundation in the US has given Aya a chance to complete her bachelor’s degree at a time of economic pressure in Jordan and across much of the region.

Aya is one of a tech-savvy generation of young Jordanians of limited means who are eager to improve their situations but lack the educationa­l opportunit­ies widely available in more advanced nations.

She has a part-time job teaching at a children’s academy in Amman and her father, who is a barber, was paying her university tuition fees of $4,500 a year. This is a huge sum for a family of limited means in Jordan, where annual per capita income is about $4,000.

Local scholarshi­ps are available in the kingdom but they are mostly awarded to students whose parents work for the state. Even middle-class families working in the private sector struggle to send their children to university.

Aya is the first person in Jordan to receive funding from the Kapadia foundation, which gives priority to students – particular­ly women – who have done volunteer work and helped others. Founder Pradeep Kapadia, originally from India, started the charity partly because he ran out of money while studying engineerin­g in the US in the 1970s.

The organisati­on is small but has helped to pay for the education of 500 people in two dozen countries since 2000. Officials say it uses algorithms and software to keep overheads low and minimise bias.

“Everything was done online,” says Aya, describing her scholarshi­p applicatio­n. “I wrote a motivation letter and explained my situation.” Since receiving the scholarshi­p, her main cost is the two-hour bus ride between Amman and Irbid. She has kept this outgoing down to a manageable $50 a month by arranging her classes so that she needs to travel only three times a week.

“It is a long way back and forth,” says Aya, whose dream is to work in robotics after she graduates.

Her background as a volunteer teaching English to children and helping in an old people’s home helped her secure the scholarshi­p. She also spent 11th grade as an exchange student in Washington state under the Kennedy-Lugar Youth Exchange and Study programme run by the US Department of State, which focuses on countries with a large proportion of Muslims.

As an exchange student, Aya stayed with a single mother and her daughter.

“We became friends and they visited me in Jordan,” she says.

While Aya’s voluntary work played a major role in getting the scholarshi­p, it was an 89year old pharmacist in Jordan who set things in motion.

Georgette Fattaleh, whose pharmacy is next to the barber shop where Aya’s father works, was the kingdom’s first female Jordanian pharmacist. Her grandson, Yazan, is the executive director of the Kapadia Education Foundation.

Ms Fattaleh graduated from Damascus University in the 1950s. In her 40s, she obtained a master’s degree in the US, and later learnt French. “She inspires me,” Aya says. “She still goes to her pharmacy every day. She is always reading and she still works on improving herself.”

Aya’s father, a barber, was paying her $4,500 tuition fees – in a country where annual per capita income is about $4,000

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 ?? Photo: Aya Abu Zaid ?? Top, Aya Abu Zaid at Jordan University for Science and Technology, in Irbid, and at a robotics competitio­n there
Photo: Aya Abu Zaid Top, Aya Abu Zaid at Jordan University for Science and Technology, in Irbid, and at a robotics competitio­n there
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