Wichita State Signs Transfer Student Partnership With College in Sri Lanka

WICHITA, KS – Wichita State University (WSU) Provost Tony Vizzini and College of Engineering Dean Royce Bowden on Friday, September 22, signed an agreement with Lalith Gamage, vice chancellor of the Sri Lanka Institute of Information Technology (SLIIT), creating a partnership that will allow international students to transfer from SLIIT to WSU and complete a degree in four years.

The partnership, which starts next semester, will create a pathway for engineering students to take two years of courses at SLIIT and finish with a four-year degree at Wichita State two years later. The agreement is designed for students working toward a bachelor's degree in industrial engineering or engineering technology – mechatronics.

This is believed to be the first "2+2" agreement involving an institution in another country, says Deepak Gupta, WSU associate professor of industrial engineering, who helped negotiate the agreement. In August, Wichita State signed a 2+2 agreement with Cowley County Community College; more partnerships between WSU and area community colleges are planned for the future.

Often when students transfer, not all courses meet WSU degree requirements. This results in most transfers taking three additional years to complete instead of two. With 2+2 agreements, partner institutions work to ensure all courses meet transfer requirements, allowing a seamless transition that ensures students don't waste time or money on classes that aren't a good fit for their final goals.

The partnership with SLIIT grew out of efforts to recruit international students from the region and was supported by numerous administrative, faculty and staff members from the Office of Academic Affairs, College of Engineering, Office of the Registrar and Office of International Education at WSU, as well as faculty and staff members from SLIIT.

"Having a relationship like this will streamline our recruiting efforts," Gupta says.

SLIIT is located in Malabe, a suburb of Colombo, the commercial center and largest city of Sri Lanka. The Colombo metro area has 5.6 million people.

SLIIT was founded in 1999 as an institution created to meet workforce demand for information technology and computer science specialists. It has added engineering to its disciplines as it has grown, says Gamage, himself an electronic and telecommunication engineer.

"We have greatly benefitted from partnerships like this one," he says.

Featured

  • Dallas ISD Voters Approve $6.2B Bond Package

    Dallas ISD voters have approved a record-setting $6.2-billion bond package that district leaders say will modernize aging campuses, eliminate portable classrooms and reshape learning environments across one of the nation’s largest school systems.

  • UT-San Antonio Begins Residence Hall Renovations

    The University of Texas at San Antonio recently began a $6-million renovation project to one of its residence halls, according to a news release. Originally completed in 1986, Chisolm Hall measures in at 120,860 square feet and is the oldest and largest residence hall on campus.

  • Girl Sitting at Library Desk, Using Laptop

    How Campus Design Shapes the Finals Week Experience

    Academic performance is not just about preparation. It is closely tied to how students manage stress, maintain their energy, and shift between work and recovery modes. Much of that is influenced, directly or indirectly, by design.

  • UCF Modernizes College of Hospitality Management

    The University of Central Florida in Orlando, Fla., recently completed a major renovation effort for the Rosen College of Hospitality Management, according to a news release. The project modernized 77,600 square feet worth of academic classrooms, teaching labs, and collaborative spaces to support both students and faculty.