UPEI president named chair of Association of Atlantic Universities

Alaa Abd-El-Aziz says leadership role is healthy for P.E.I.: 'Size is not everything'

Image | Alaa Abd-El-Aziz

Caption: UPEI president Alaa Abd-El-Aziz has been appointed chair of the Association of Atlantic Universities, and says he hopes to improve student satisfaction numbers that are already high across the region. (Association of Atlantic Universities)

The president of the University of Prince Edward Island has been named chair of the Association of Atlantic Universities.
Alaa Abd-El-Aziz, who will lead the region's 16 university presidents for the next two years, was appointed this fall and was officially named to the post Wednesday.
Abd-El-Aziz told host Bruce Rainnie on CBC News: Compass that he's extremely heartened by the results of the association's 2016 graduate retention study which showed:
  • Eighty-seven per cent of Atlantic graduates are satisfied with the quality of their education.
  • Seventy per cent would recommend their province of study as a place to live and work.
  • Seventy-five per cent of international students said they would stay in their province of study if offered work.

'It's not our limit yet'

"They're amazing numbers, but in the next few years I would really like to work hard with my colleagues in increasing this number," Abd-El-Aziz said. "We have a great start, but it's not our limit yet."
He stressed the importance of international students and noted that 65 countries are represented at UPEI. Abd-El-Aziz said if international students stay in their province of study they become fantastic citizens, and if they leave they build bridges and take "the flag" of their universities with them.
Abd-El-Aziz, who previously has been a member and vice-chair of the association, said the co-operation between the 16 presidents is strong. He pointed to the $100 million in research funding recently announced for the Ocean Frontier Institute, which will bring together international scientists, students and industry to focus on issues such as reversing fish species collapse and evaluating the sustainability of aquaculture.
The money was the largest program award in the country from the Canada First Research Excellence Fund.
"Why? Because Dalhousie, Memorial and UPEI, the three universities, have worked very, very well together," Abd-El-Aziz said.
The UPEI president said his colleagues all face the same challenges of attraction and retention and all work to be an economic driver in the region.

'Size is not everything'

Abd-El-Aziz said it's healthy for P.E.I. to play a leadership role among universities because the province has led since Confederation.
"Size is not everything," he said.
Abd-El-Aziz received his undergraduate and masters degrees in Cairo, his PhD from the University of Saskatchewan, and did a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of Toronto. He also worked at UBC and the University of Winnipeg.
He has been president since 2011 and was reappointed for a second five-year term.