Paul Tazewell is the talk of Hollywood after winning an Academy Award for his costume design work for “Wicked.”
Still, it was the talk Tazewell delivered to Kent State University students and others in 2017 that has the campus community still cheering for the Akron, Ohio, native, who became the first Black man to win an Oscar for costume design. Tazewell first led a master class with students before speaking to a sold-out crowd at the E. Turner Stump Theatre.
His visit was part of the Thomas Schroth Visiting Artist Series and followed the overwhelming success of his work on the blockbuster Broadway musical “Hamilton,” for which Tazewell received a Tony Award, and of his work on “The Wiz Live!,” for which he won an Emmy.
Paul Tazewell speaks to theatre students during a master class presentation in September 2017.
According to the Record-Courier, Tazewell’s advice to theatre students at the master class was to “learn how to take steps back and take 10 deep breaths when things feel too hectic” and “be a team player. Whether you are a designer or assistant, you need to know how to function as part of a team and pull your weight.”
Tazewell, 60, was previously nominated for an Oscar in 2022 for his costume designs for Steven Spielberg’s ‘‘West Side Story.”
During his acceptance speech, the designer was greeted with a standing ovation and told the crowd “this is everything.”
Paul Tazewell is the talk of Hollywood after winning an Academy Award for his costume design work for “Wicked.”
Still, it was the talk Tazewell delivered to Kent State University students and others in 2017 that has the campus community still cheering for the Akron, Ohio, native, who became the first Black man to win an Oscar for costume design. Tazewell first led a master class with students before speaking to a sold-out crowd at the E. Turner Stump Theatre.
His visit was part of the Thomas Schroth Visiting Artist Series and followed the overwhelming success of his work on the blockbuster Broadway musical “Hamilton,” for which Tazewell received a Tony Award, and of his work on “The Wiz Live!,” for which he won an Emmy.
Paul Tazewell speaks to theatre students during a master class presentation in September 2017.
According to the Record-Courier, Tazewell’s advice to theatre students at the master class was to “learn how to take steps back and take 10 deep breaths when things feel too hectic” and “be a team player. Whether you are a designer or assistant, you need to know how to function as part of a team and pull your weight.”
Tazewell, 60, was previously nominated for an Oscar in 2022 for his costume designs for Steven Spielberg’s ‘‘West Side Story.”
During his acceptance speech, the designer was greeted with a standing ovation and told the crowd “this is everything.”
Paul Tazewell is the talk of Hollywood after winning an Academy Award for his costume design work for “Wicked.”
Still, it was the talk Tazewell delivered to Kent State University students and others in 2017 that has the campus community still cheering for the Akron, Ohio, native, who became the first Black man to win an Oscar for costume design. Tazewell first led a master class with students before speaking to a sold-out crowd at the E. Turner Stump Theatre.
His visit was part of the Thomas Schroth Visiting Artist Series and followed the overwhelming success of his work on the blockbuster Broadway musical “Hamilton,” for which Tazewell received a Tony Award, and of his work on “The Wiz Live!,” for which he won an Emmy.
Paul Tazewell speaks to theatre students during a master class presentation in September 2017.
According to the Record-Courier, Tazewell’s advice to theatre students at the master class was to “learn how to take steps back and take 10 deep breaths when things feel too hectic” and “be a team player. Whether you are a designer or assistant, you need to know how to function as part of a team and pull your weight.”
Tazewell, 60, was previously nominated for an Oscar in 2022 for his costume designs for Steven Spielberg’s ‘‘West Side Story.”
During his acceptance speech, the designer was greeted with a standing ovation and told the crowd “this is everything.”
Rwandan Minister of State for Education Claudette Irere is visiting the Kent Campus this week to meet with officials from the Office of Global Education, various colleges and Rwandan students currently studying at Kent State. Irere’s visit aims to deepen the African nation’s educational partnerships with Kent State, hoping to see the university eventually open a formal office there.
Fashion forward
On Jan. 22, Kent State Today was on hand when Irere and Executive Vice President and Provost Melody Tankersley, Ph.D., signed a letter of intent for Kent State to bring its fashion program to Rwanda.
Irere said that while Rwanda and Africa in general already excel in fashion design, there are areas of expertise that Kent State’s nationally renowned school can bring to help elevate the field in Africa, particularly in fashion merchandising.
Tankersley said the partnership with Rwanda has brought great enrichment to Kent State and its students.
Kent State Executive Vice President and Provost Melody Tankersley, Ph.D., meets with Claudette Irere, Rwandan minster of state for education.
“It’s quite an honor to be able to partner with the University of Rwanda and the Ministry of Education to come together to offer this fashion program,” Tankersley said. “Kent State is really proud of what we do in fashion design and merchandising and to be able to work with you and all the Rwandans in bringing this together is an honor few people get to experience.”
Irere thanked Kent State for its confidence in Rwanda, noting that the university could have partnered with any other country, and she was grateful they selected Rwanda. The minister also noted how the program would benefit not only Rwandans but students throughout Africa who would come to the Rwandan capital of Kigali for the proposed program.
Marcello Fantoni, Ph.D., Kent State’s vice president for global education, said Irere was spending several days touring various colleges at Kent State, including the College of Aeronautics and Engineering, where work is ongoing to bring Kent State’s aeronautics program to the University of Rwanda.
Soaring partnership
Christina Bloebaum, Ph.D.
Christina Bloebaum, Ph.D., dean of the college, said details of the program are nearly complete; it will be a traditional two-plus-two program in which students would take courses in Rwanda for two years and then come to the Kent Campus to complete their degrees.
“The hope is it will be approved sometime in the spring,” she said, noting that it will likely formally begin during the 2026 Fall Semester.
Bloebaum said Rwandan students currently working on their doctorate degrees in aeronautics at Kent State are likely to return home to teach in the program.
Fantoni added that RwandAir, the flag carrier airline of Rwanda, also has reached out to Kent State for training of pilots and other airport management professionals.
A dual master’s degree program between Kent State’s School of Peace and Conflict Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences and the University of Rwanda’s Centre for Conflict Management also is nearing fruition.
Rwandan Student Success
The first stop on Minister Irere’s visit was the Office of Global Education in Van Campen Hall, where all 28 Rwandan students at Kent State braved Wednesday morning’s frigid temperatures to have coffee and doughnuts with Irere.
A graduate of Oklahoma Christian University in Edmond, Oklahoma, Irere said she was pleased to see how the Rwandan students were creating a community at Kent State, just as they had in Oklahoma, where she earned her master’s degree in computer engineering.
Soon, Irere predicted, there would be 50 or 100 Rwandans studying at Kent State. She expressed her gratitude to Fantoni and the Office of Global Education for allowing the Rwandan students “to call Kent State home.”
Rwandan Minster of State for Education Claudette Irere met with Rwandan students attending Kent State during her visit to the Kent Campus.
She also emphasized the country’s desire for Kent State to open a physical location in Rwanda.
Kent State began working with the University of Rwanda and the Rwandan government in 2022 to create educational partnerships. The university also opened its base of operations for African recruitment in the Rwandan capital of Kigali. That same year, the first 12 Rwandan students came to Kent State to begin their studies.
Fantoni said the Rwandan students have been a pleasure to have at Kent State.
“I think you really make your country proud,” he said. “You are humble, you are here to honestly learn, and you have a heart, doing something that you can honestly share when you go back.”
Rwandan Minster of State for Education Claudette Irere and Kent State Vice President for Global Education Marcello Fantoni talk with students.
Fantoni said the students are eager to return home to bring their knowledge back to Rwanda to help build up their country and make it a better place. Over the past three years, Fantoni said he has learned just how important the government of Rwanda believes that education is for the development of the country.
“I have been to many countries and in some places it is technology, at other places, it is industrialization, and in other places it is building roads. I think building people is really good,” Fantoni said. “And I am honored to represent Kent State in being part of this plan and you are a beautiful example that it’s a successful plan.”
Rwandan student population growing
The original 12 students have since been joined by 16 others, including Kundwa Sisi, one of the newest Rwandan students to begin her studies at Kent State.
Sisi, 19, a first-year political science major in the Honors College, met Fantoni when she was working as an intern for Arise Rwanda, a non-profit organization in Kigali, that works to transform the community, by lifting residents from extreme poverty through education, clean water sources, healthcare, economic development and pastoral care.
All 28 Rwandan students attending Kent State came out to meet with Claudette Irere, Rwanda's minister of state for education on Jan. 22.
Sisi was present when about a dozen Kent State student-athletes visited Rwanda in January 2024 for a service trip and toured a new hospital under construction in the town of Boneza. One of her duties was to help serve as a guide for the group, which included Fantoni, and the pair began chatting about Kent State. Fantoni encouraged Kundwa to apply and she began her first year in the 2024 Fall Semester.
“It’s so diverse, that’s what I like about Kent State,” she said. “It’s a very engaging environment, I feel like you can learn so much here.”
Sisi hopes to one day work for the United Nations, representing Rwanda, working to give the underserved access to housing, education and health care.
Rwandan Minister of State for Education Claudette Irere is visiting the Kent Campus this week to meet with officials from the Office of Global Education, various colleges and Rwandan students currently studying at Kent State. Irere’s visit aims to deepen the African nation’s educational partnerships with Kent State, hoping to see the university eventually open a formal office there.
Fashion forward
On Jan. 22, Kent State Today was on hand when Irere and Executive Vice President and Provost Melody Tankersley, Ph.D., signed a letter of intent for Kent State to bring its fashion program to Rwanda.
Irere said that while Rwanda and Africa in general already excel in fashion design, there are areas of expertise that Kent State’s nationally renowned school can bring to help elevate the field in Africa, particularly in fashion merchandising.
Tankersley said the partnership with Rwanda has brought great enrichment to Kent State and its students.
Kent State Executive Vice President and Provost Melody Tankersley, Ph.D., meets with Claudette Irere, Rwandan minster of state for education.
“It’s quite an honor to be able to partner with the University of Rwanda and the Ministry of Education to come together to offer this fashion program,” Tankersley said. “Kent State is really proud of what we do in fashion design and merchandising and to be able to work with you and all the Rwandans in bringing this together is an honor few people get to experience.”
Irere thanked Kent State for its confidence in Rwanda, noting that the university could have partnered with any other country, and she was grateful they selected Rwanda. The minister also noted how the program would benefit not only Rwandans but students throughout Africa who would come to the Rwandan capital of Kigali for the proposed program.
Marcello Fantoni, Ph.D., Kent State’s vice president for global education, said Irere was spending several days touring various colleges at Kent State, including the College of Aeronautics and Engineering, where work is ongoing to bring Kent State’s aeronautics program to the University of Rwanda.
Soaring partnership
Christina Bloebaum, Ph.D.
Christina Bloebaum, Ph.D., dean of the college, said details of the program are nearly complete; it will be a traditional two-plus-two program in which students would take courses in Rwanda for two years and then come to the Kent Campus to complete their degrees.
“The hope is it will be approved sometime in the spring,” she said, noting that it will likely formally begin during the 2026 Fall Semester.
Bloebaum said Rwandan students currently working on their doctorate degrees in aeronautics at Kent State are likely to return home to teach in the program.
Fantoni added that RwandAir, the flag carrier airline of Rwanda, also has reached out to Kent State for training of pilots and other airport management professionals.
A dual master’s degree program between Kent State’s School of Peace and Conflict Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences and the University of Rwanda’s Centre for Conflict Management also is nearing fruition.
Rwandan Student Success
The first stop on Minister Irere’s visit was the Office of Global Education in Van Campen Hall, where all 28 Rwandan students at Kent State braved Wednesday morning’s frigid temperatures to have coffee and doughnuts with Irere.
A graduate of Oklahoma Christian University in Edmond, Oklahoma, Irere said she was pleased to see how the Rwandan students were creating a community at Kent State, just as they had in Oklahoma, where she earned her master’s degree in computer engineering.
Soon, Irere predicted, there would be 50 or 100 Rwandans studying at Kent State. She expressed her gratitude to Fantoni and the Office of Global Education for allowing the Rwandan students “to call Kent State home.”
Rwandan Minster of State for Education Claudette Irere met with Rwandan students attending Kent State during her visit to the Kent Campus.
She also emphasized the country’s desire for Kent State to open a physical location in Rwanda.
Kent State began working with the University of Rwanda and the Rwandan government in 2022 to create educational partnerships. The university also opened its base of operations for African recruitment in the Rwandan capital of Kigali. That same year, the first 12 Rwandan students came to Kent State to begin their studies.
Fantoni said the Rwandan students have been a pleasure to have at Kent State.
“I think you really make your country proud,” he said. “You are humble, you are here to honestly learn, and you have a heart, doing something that you can honestly share when you go back.”
Rwandan Minster of State for Education Claudette Irere and Kent State Vice President for Global Education Marcello Fantoni talk with students.
Fantoni said the students are eager to return home to bring their knowledge back to Rwanda to help build up their country and make it a better place. Over the past three years, Fantoni said he has learned just how important the government of Rwanda believes that education is for the development of the country.
“I have been to many countries and in some places it is technology, at other places, it is industrialization, and in other places it is building roads. I think building people is really good,” Fantoni said. “And I am honored to represent Kent State in being part of this plan and you are a beautiful example that it’s a successful plan.”
Rwandan student population growing
The original 12 students have since been joined by 16 others, including Kundwa Sisi, one of the newest Rwandan students to begin her studies at Kent State.
Sisi, 19, a first-year political science major in the Honors College, met Fantoni when she was working as an intern for Arise Rwanda, a non-profit organization in Kigali, that works to transform the community, by lifting residents from extreme poverty through education, clean water sources, healthcare, economic development and pastoral care.
All 28 Rwandan students attending Kent State came out to meet with Claudette Irere, Rwanda's minister of state for education on Jan. 22.
Sisi was present when about a dozen Kent State student-athletes visited Rwanda in January 2024 for a service trip and toured a new hospital under construction in the town of Boneza. One of her duties was to help serve as a guide for the group, which included Fantoni, and the pair began chatting about Kent State. Fantoni encouraged Kundwa to apply and she began her first year in the 2024 Fall Semester.
“It’s so diverse, that’s what I like about Kent State,” she said. “It’s a very engaging environment, I feel like you can learn so much here.”
Sisi hopes to one day work for the United Nations, representing Rwanda, working to give the underserved access to housing, education and health care.
Rwandan Minister of State for Education Claudette Irere is visiting the Kent Campus this week to meet with officials from the Office of Global Education, various colleges and Rwandan students currently studying at Kent State. Irere’s visit aims to deepen the African nation’s educational partnerships with Kent State, hoping to see the university eventually open a formal office there.
Fashion forward
On Jan. 22, Kent State Today was on hand when Irere and Executive Vice President and Provost Melody Tankersley, Ph.D., signed a letter of intent for Kent State to bring its fashion program to Rwanda.
Irere said that while Rwanda and Africa in general already excel in fashion design, there are areas of expertise that Kent State’s nationally renowned school can bring to help elevate the field in Africa, particularly in fashion merchandising.
Tankersley said the partnership with Rwanda has brought great enrichment to Kent State and its students.
Kent State Executive Vice President and Provost Melody Tankersley, Ph.D., meets with Claudette Irere, Rwandan minster of state for education.
“It’s quite an honor to be able to partner with the University of Rwanda and the Ministry of Education to come together to offer this fashion program,” Tankersley said. “Kent State is really proud of what we do in fashion design and merchandising and to be able to work with you and all the Rwandans in bringing this together is an honor few people get to experience.”
Irere thanked Kent State for its confidence in Rwanda, noting that the university could have partnered with any other country, and she was grateful they selected Rwanda. The minister also noted how the program would benefit not only Rwandans but students throughout Africa who would come to the Rwandan capital of Kigali for the proposed program.
Marcello Fantoni, Ph.D., Kent State’s vice president for global education, said Irere was spending several days touring various colleges at Kent State, including the College of Aeronautics and Engineering, where work is ongoing to bring Kent State’s aeronautics program to the University of Rwanda.
Soaring partnership
Christina Bloebaum, Ph.D.
Christina Bloebaum, Ph.D., dean of the college, said details of the program are nearly complete; it will be a traditional two-plus-two program in which students would take courses in Rwanda for two years and then come to the Kent Campus to complete their degrees.
“The hope is it will be approved sometime in the spring,” she said, noting that it will likely formally begin during the 2026 Fall Semester.
Bloebaum said Rwandan students currently working on their doctorate degrees in aeronautics at Kent State are likely to return home to teach in the program.
Fantoni added that RwandAir, the flag carrier airline of Rwanda, also has reached out to Kent State for training of pilots and other airport management professionals.
A dual master’s degree program between Kent State’s School of Peace and Conflict Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences and the University of Rwanda’s Centre for Conflict Management also is nearing fruition.
Rwandan Student Success
The first stop on Minister Irere’s visit was the Office of Global Education in Van Campen Hall, where all 28 Rwandan students at Kent State braved Wednesday morning’s frigid temperatures to have coffee and doughnuts with Irere.
A graduate of Oklahoma Christian University in Edmond, Oklahoma, Irere said she was pleased to see how the Rwandan students were creating a community at Kent State, just as they had in Oklahoma, where she earned her master’s degree in computer engineering.
Soon, Irere predicted, there would be 50 or 100 Rwandans studying at Kent State. She expressed her gratitude to Fantoni and the Office of Global Education for allowing the Rwandan students “to call Kent State home.”
Rwandan Minster of State for Education Claudette Irere met with Rwandan students attending Kent State during her visit to the Kent Campus.
She also emphasized the country’s desire for Kent State to open a physical location in Rwanda.
Kent State began working with the University of Rwanda and the Rwandan government in 2022 to create educational partnerships. The university also opened its base of operations for African recruitment in the Rwandan capital of Kigali. That same year, the first 12 Rwandan students came to Kent State to begin their studies.
Fantoni said the Rwandan students have been a pleasure to have at Kent State.
“I think you really make your country proud,” he said. “You are humble, you are here to honestly learn, and you have a heart, doing something that you can honestly share when you go back.”
Rwandan Minster of State for Education Claudette Irere and Kent State Vice President for Global Education Marcello Fantoni talk with students.
Fantoni said the students are eager to return home to bring their knowledge back to Rwanda to help build up their country and make it a better place. Over the past three years, Fantoni said he has learned just how important the government of Rwanda believes that education is for the development of the country.
“I have been to many countries and in some places it is technology, at other places, it is industrialization, and in other places it is building roads. I think building people is really good,” Fantoni said. “And I am honored to represent Kent State in being part of this plan and you are a beautiful example that it’s a successful plan.”
Rwandan student population growing
The original 12 students have since been joined by 16 others, including Kundwa Sisi, one of the newest Rwandan students to begin her studies at Kent State.
Sisi, 19, a first-year political science major in the Honors College, met Fantoni when she was working as an intern for Arise Rwanda, a non-profit organization in Kigali, that works to transform the community, by lifting residents from extreme poverty through education, clean water sources, healthcare, economic development and pastoral care.
All 28 Rwandan students attending Kent State came out to meet with Claudette Irere, Rwanda's minister of state for education on Jan. 22.
Sisi was present when about a dozen Kent State student-athletes visited Rwanda in January 2024 for a service trip and toured a new hospital under construction in the town of Boneza. One of her duties was to help serve as a guide for the group, which included Fantoni, and the pair began chatting about Kent State. Fantoni encouraged Kundwa to apply and she began her first year in the 2024 Fall Semester.
“It’s so diverse, that’s what I like about Kent State,” she said. “It’s a very engaging environment, I feel like you can learn so much here.”
Sisi hopes to one day work for the United Nations, representing Rwanda, working to give the underserved access to housing, education and health care.
Rwandan Minister of State for Education Claudette Irere is visiting the Kent Campus this week to meet with officials from the Office of Global Education, various colleges and Rwandan students currently studying at Kent State. Irere’s visit aims to deepen the African nation’s educational partnerships with Kent State, hoping to see the university eventually open a formal office there.
Fashion forward
On Jan. 22, Kent State Today was on hand when Irere and Executive Vice President and Provost Melody Tankersley, Ph.D., signed a letter of intent for Kent State to bring its fashion program to Rwanda.
Irere said that while Rwanda and Africa in general already excel in fashion design, there are areas of expertise that Kent State’s nationally renowned school can bring to help elevate the field in Africa, particularly in fashion merchandising.
Tankersley said the partnership with Rwanda has brought great enrichment to Kent State and its students.
Kent State Executive Vice President and Provost Melody Tankersley, Ph.D., meets with Claudette Irere, Rwandan minster of state for education.
“It’s quite an honor to be able to partner with the University of Rwanda and the Ministry of Education to come together to offer this fashion program,” Tankersley said. “Kent State is really proud of what we do in fashion design and merchandising and to be able to work with you and all the Rwandans in bringing this together is an honor few people get to experience.”
Irere thanked Kent State for its confidence in Rwanda, noting that the university could have partnered with any other country, and she was grateful they selected Rwanda. The minister also noted how the program would benefit not only Rwandans but students throughout Africa who would come to the Rwandan capital of Kigali for the proposed program.
Marcello Fantoni, Ph.D., Kent State’s vice president for global education, said Irere was spending several days touring various colleges at Kent State, including the College of Aeronautics and Engineering, where work is ongoing to bring Kent State’s aeronautics program to the University of Rwanda.
Soaring partnership
Christina Bloebaum, Ph.D.
Christina Bloebaum, Ph.D., dean of the college, said details of the program are nearly complete; it will be a traditional two-plus-two program in which students would take courses in Rwanda for two years and then come to the Kent Campus to complete their degrees.
“The hope is it will be approved sometime in the spring,” she said, noting that it will likely formally begin during the 2026 Fall Semester.
Bloebaum said Rwandan students currently working on their doctorate degrees in aeronautics at Kent State are likely to return home to teach in the program.
Fantoni added that RwandAir, the flag carrier airline of Rwanda, also has reached out to Kent State for training of pilots and other airport management professionals.
A dual master’s degree program between Kent State’s School of Peace and Conflict Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences and the University of Rwanda’s Centre for Conflict Management also is nearing fruition.
Rwandan Student Success
The first stop on Minister Irere’s visit was the Office of Global Education in Van Campen Hall, where all 28 Rwandan students at Kent State braved Wednesday morning’s frigid temperatures to have coffee and doughnuts with Irere.
A graduate of Oklahoma Christian University in Edmond, Oklahoma, Irere said she was pleased to see how the Rwandan students were creating a community at Kent State, just as they had in Oklahoma, where she earned her master’s degree in computer engineering.
Soon, Irere predicted, there would be 50 or 100 Rwandans studying at Kent State. She expressed her gratitude to Fantoni and the Office of Global Education for allowing the Rwandan students “to call Kent State home.”
Rwandan Minster of State for Education Claudette Irere met with Rwandan students attending Kent State during her visit to the Kent Campus.
She also emphasized the country’s desire for Kent State to open a physical location in Rwanda.
Kent State began working with the University of Rwanda and the Rwandan government in 2022 to create educational partnerships. The university also opened its base of operations for African recruitment in the Rwandan capital of Kigali. That same year, the first 12 Rwandan students came to Kent State to begin their studies.
Fantoni said the Rwandan students have been a pleasure to have at Kent State.
“I think you really make your country proud,” he said. “You are humble, you are here to honestly learn, and you have a heart, doing something that you can honestly share when you go back.”
Rwandan Minster of State for Education Claudette Irere and Kent State Vice President for Global Education Marcello Fantoni talk with students.
Fantoni said the students are eager to return home to bring their knowledge back to Rwanda to help build up their country and make it a better place. Over the past three years, Fantoni said he has learned just how important the government of Rwanda believes that education is for the development of the country.
“I have been to many countries and in some places it is technology, at other places, it is industrialization, and in other places it is building roads. I think building people is really good,” Fantoni said. “And I am honored to represent Kent State in being part of this plan and you are a beautiful example that it’s a successful plan.”
Rwandan student population growing
The original 12 students have since been joined by 16 others, including Kundwa Sisi, one of the newest Rwandan students to begin her studies at Kent State.
Sisi, 19, a first-year political science major in the Honors College, met Fantoni when she was working as an intern for Arise Rwanda, a non-profit organization in Kigali, that works to transform the community, by lifting residents from extreme poverty through education, clean water sources, healthcare, economic development and pastoral care.
All 28 Rwandan students attending Kent State came out to meet with Claudette Irere, Rwanda's minister of state for education on Jan. 22.
Sisi was present when about a dozen Kent State student-athletes visited Rwanda in January 2024 for a service trip and toured a new hospital under construction in the town of Boneza. One of her duties was to help serve as a guide for the group, which included Fantoni, and the pair began chatting about Kent State. Fantoni encouraged Kundwa to apply and she began her first year in the 2024 Fall Semester.
“It’s so diverse, that’s what I like about Kent State,” she said. “It’s a very engaging environment, I feel like you can learn so much here.”
Sisi hopes to one day work for the United Nations, representing Rwanda, working to give the underserved access to housing, education and health care.
Rwandan Minister of State for Education Claudette Irere is visiting the Kent Campus this week to meet with officials from the Office of Global Education, various colleges and Rwandan students currently studying at Kent State. Irere’s visit aims to deepen the African nation’s educational partnerships with Kent State, hoping to see the university eventually open a formal office there.
Fashion forward
On Jan. 22, Kent State Today was on hand when Irere and Executive Vice President and Provost Melody Tankersley, Ph.D., signed a letter of intent for Kent State to bring its fashion program to Rwanda.
Irere said that while Rwanda and Africa in general already excel in fashion design, there are areas of expertise that Kent State’s nationally renowned school can bring to help elevate the field in Africa, particularly in fashion merchandising.
Tankersley said the partnership with Rwanda has brought great enrichment to Kent State and its students.
Kent State Executive Vice President and Provost Melody Tankersley, Ph.D., meets with Claudette Irere, Rwandan minster of state for education.
“It’s quite an honor to be able to partner with the University of Rwanda and the Ministry of Education to come together to offer this fashion program,” Tankersley said. “Kent State is really proud of what we do in fashion design and merchandising and to be able to work with you and all the Rwandans in bringing this together is an honor few people get to experience.”
Irere thanked Kent State for its confidence in Rwanda, noting that the university could have partnered with any other country, and she was grateful they selected Rwanda. The minister also noted how the program would benefit not only Rwandans but students throughout Africa who would come to the Rwandan capital of Kigali for the proposed program.
Marcello Fantoni, Ph.D., Kent State’s vice president for global education, said Irere was spending several days touring various colleges at Kent State, including the College of Aeronautics and Engineering, where work is ongoing to bring Kent State’s aeronautics program to the University of Rwanda.
Soaring partnership
Christina Bloebaum, Ph.D.
Christina Bloebaum, Ph.D., dean of the college, said details of the program are nearly complete; it will be a traditional two-plus-two program in which students would take courses in Rwanda for two years and then come to the Kent Campus to complete their degrees.
“The hope is it will be approved sometime in the spring,” she said, noting that it will likely formally begin during the 2026 Fall Semester.
Bloebaum said Rwandan students currently working on their doctorate degrees in aeronautics at Kent State are likely to return home to teach in the program.
Fantoni added that RwandAir, the flag carrier airline of Rwanda, also has reached out to Kent State for training of pilots and other airport management professionals.
A dual master’s degree program between Kent State’s School of Peace and Conflict Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences and the University of Rwanda’s Centre for Conflict Management also is nearing fruition.
Rwandan Student Success
The first stop on Minister Irere’s visit was the Office of Global Education in Van Campen Hall, where all 28 Rwandan students at Kent State braved Wednesday morning’s frigid temperatures to have coffee and doughnuts with Irere.
A graduate of Oklahoma Christian University in Edmond, Oklahoma, Irere said she was pleased to see how the Rwandan students were creating a community at Kent State, just as they had in Oklahoma, where she earned her master’s degree in computer engineering.
Soon, Irere predicted, there would be 50 or 100 Rwandans studying at Kent State. She expressed her gratitude to Fantoni and the Office of Global Education for allowing the Rwandan students “to call Kent State home.”
Rwandan Minster of State for Education Claudette Irere met with Rwandan students attending Kent State during her visit to the Kent Campus.
She also emphasized the country’s desire for Kent State to open a physical location in Rwanda.
Kent State began working with the University of Rwanda and the Rwandan government in 2022 to create educational partnerships. The university also opened its base of operations for African recruitment in the Rwandan capital of Kigali. That same year, the first 12 Rwandan students came to Kent State to begin their studies.
Fantoni said the Rwandan students have been a pleasure to have at Kent State.
“I think you really make your country proud,” he said. “You are humble, you are here to honestly learn, and you have a heart, doing something that you can honestly share when you go back.”
Rwandan Minster of State for Education Claudette Irere and Kent State Vice President for Global Education Marcello Fantoni talk with students.
Fantoni said the students are eager to return home to bring their knowledge back to Rwanda to help build up their country and make it a better place. Over the past three years, Fantoni said he has learned just how important the government of Rwanda believes that education is for the development of the country.
“I have been to many countries and in some places it is technology, at other places, it is industrialization, and in other places it is building roads. I think building people is really good,” Fantoni said. “And I am honored to represent Kent State in being part of this plan and you are a beautiful example that it’s a successful plan.”
Rwandan student population growing
The original 12 students have since been joined by 16 others, including Kundwa Sisi, one of the newest Rwandan students to begin her studies at Kent State.
Sisi, 19, a first-year political science major in the Honors College, met Fantoni when she was working as an intern for Arise Rwanda, a non-profit organization in Kigali, that works to transform the community, by lifting residents from extreme poverty through education, clean water sources, healthcare, economic development and pastoral care.
All 28 Rwandan students attending Kent State came out to meet with Claudette Irere, Rwanda's minister of state for education on Jan. 22.
Sisi was present when about a dozen Kent State student-athletes visited Rwanda in January 2024 for a service trip and toured a new hospital under construction in the town of Boneza. One of her duties was to help serve as a guide for the group, which included Fantoni, and the pair began chatting about Kent State. Fantoni encouraged Kundwa to apply and she began her first year in the 2024 Fall Semester.
“It’s so diverse, that’s what I like about Kent State,” she said. “It’s a very engaging environment, I feel like you can learn so much here.”
Sisi hopes to one day work for the United Nations, representing Rwanda, working to give the underserved access to housing, education and health care.
Rwandan Minister of State for Education Claudette Irere is visiting the Kent Campus this week to meet with officials from the Office of Global Education, various colleges and Rwandan students currently studying at Kent State. Irere’s visit aims to deepen the African nation’s educational partnerships with Kent State, hoping to see the university eventually open a formal office there.
Fashion forward
On Jan. 22, Kent State Today was on hand when Irere and Executive Vice President and Provost Melody Tankersley, Ph.D., signed a letter of intent for Kent State to bring its fashion program to Rwanda.
Irere said that while Rwanda and Africa in general already excel in fashion design, there are areas of expertise that Kent State’s nationally renowned school can bring to help elevate the field in Africa, particularly in fashion merchandising.
Tankersley said the partnership with Rwanda has brought great enrichment to Kent State and its students.
Kent State Executive Vice President and Provost Melody Tankersley, Ph.D., meets with Claudette Irere, Rwandan minster of state for education.
“It’s quite an honor to be able to partner with the University of Rwanda and the Ministry of Education to come together to offer this fashion program,” Tankersley said. “Kent State is really proud of what we do in fashion design and merchandising and to be able to work with you and all the Rwandans in bringing this together is an honor few people get to experience.”
Irere thanked Kent State for its confidence in Rwanda, noting that the university could have partnered with any other country, and she was grateful they selected Rwanda. The minister also noted how the program would benefit not only Rwandans but students throughout Africa who would come to the Rwandan capital of Kigali for the proposed program.
Marcello Fantoni, Ph.D., Kent State’s vice president for global education, said Irere was spending several days touring various colleges at Kent State, including the College of Aeronautics and Engineering, where work is ongoing to bring Kent State’s aeronautics program to the University of Rwanda.
Soaring partnership
Christina Bloebaum, Ph.D.
Christina Bloebaum, Ph.D., dean of the college, said details of the program are nearly complete; it will be a traditional two-plus-two program in which students would take courses in Rwanda for two years and then come to the Kent Campus to complete their degrees.
“The hope is it will be approved sometime in the spring,” she said, noting that it will likely formally begin during the 2026 Fall Semester.
Bloebaum said Rwandan students currently working on their doctorate degrees in aeronautics at Kent State are likely to return home to teach in the program.
Fantoni added that RwandAir, the flag carrier airline of Rwanda, also has reached out to Kent State for training of pilots and other airport management professionals.
A dual master’s degree program between Kent State’s School of Peace and Conflict Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences and the University of Rwanda’s Centre for Conflict Management also is nearing fruition.
Rwandan Student Success
The first stop on Minister Irere’s visit was the Office of Global Education in Van Campen Hall, where all 28 Rwandan students at Kent State braved Wednesday morning’s frigid temperatures to have coffee and doughnuts with Irere.
A graduate of Oklahoma Christian University in Edmond, Oklahoma, Irere said she was pleased to see how the Rwandan students were creating a community at Kent State, just as they had in Oklahoma, where she earned her master’s degree in computer engineering.
Soon, Irere predicted, there would be 50 or 100 Rwandans studying at Kent State. She expressed her gratitude to Fantoni and the Office of Global Education for allowing the Rwandan students “to call Kent State home.”
Rwandan Minster of State for Education Claudette Irere met with Rwandan students attending Kent State during her visit to the Kent Campus.
She also emphasized the country’s desire for Kent State to open a physical location in Rwanda.
Kent State began working with the University of Rwanda and the Rwandan government in 2022 to create educational partnerships. The university also opened its base of operations for African recruitment in the Rwandan capital of Kigali. That same year, the first 12 Rwandan students came to Kent State to begin their studies.
Fantoni said the Rwandan students have been a pleasure to have at Kent State.
“I think you really make your country proud,” he said. “You are humble, you are here to honestly learn, and you have a heart, doing something that you can honestly share when you go back.”
Rwandan Minster of State for Education Claudette Irere and Kent State Vice President for Global Education Marcello Fantoni talk with students.
Fantoni said the students are eager to return home to bring their knowledge back to Rwanda to help build up their country and make it a better place. Over the past three years, Fantoni said he has learned just how important the government of Rwanda believes that education is for the development of the country.
“I have been to many countries and in some places it is technology, at other places, it is industrialization, and in other places it is building roads. I think building people is really good,” Fantoni said. “And I am honored to represent Kent State in being part of this plan and you are a beautiful example that it’s a successful plan.”
Rwandan student population growing
The original 12 students have since been joined by 16 others, including Kundwa Sisi, one of the newest Rwandan students to begin her studies at Kent State.
Sisi, 19, a first-year political science major in the Honors College, met Fantoni when she was working as an intern for Arise Rwanda, a non-profit organization in Kigali, that works to transform the community, by lifting residents from extreme poverty through education, clean water sources, healthcare, economic development and pastoral care.
All 28 Rwandan students attending Kent State came out to meet with Claudette Irere, Rwanda's minister of state for education on Jan. 22.
Sisi was present when about a dozen Kent State student-athletes visited Rwanda in January 2024 for a service trip and toured a new hospital under construction in the town of Boneza. One of her duties was to help serve as a guide for the group, which included Fantoni, and the pair began chatting about Kent State. Fantoni encouraged Kundwa to apply and she began her first year in the 2024 Fall Semester.
“It’s so diverse, that’s what I like about Kent State,” she said. “It’s a very engaging environment, I feel like you can learn so much here.”
Sisi hopes to one day work for the United Nations, representing Rwanda, working to give the underserved access to housing, education and health care.
When recent graduate Cecelia Kirk, a fashion merchandising major, first arrived on Kent State University’s Kent Campus in 2021, she could hardly have imagined the connection she would develop with university President Todd Diacon.
From the very beginning, Diacon extended a remarkably personal welcome, helping Kirk, a Knoxville, Tennessee, resident, and other freshmen move their belongings into their residence halls. Her mother, Melinda Kirk, was incredibly impressed by Diacon’s warm, personal touch.
So, when Melinda returned to Tennessee and sent Diacon a thank you email, it soon dawned on her that Diacon had been her instructor in the early 1990s at the University of Tennessee Knoxville in a Latin American Studies course.
This little coincidence is what she and Cecelia call “God winks,” the signs that showed them that Cecelia’s college choice was meant to be.
The next day, President Diacon responded.
“God winks are little signs that maybe you’re in the right place or you’re heading in the right direction,” said Cecelia, who earned a Bachelor of Science in fashioning merchandising from Kent State’s highly ranked School of Fashion. “It felt good to hear that [Diacon was Melinda’s professor] and it was comforting. He’s such a fun person to be around. Any interaction I’ve had with him has been awesome.”
Before arriving at Kent State, the family had been told there would be abundant resources to help Cecelia become successful. The family found that Kent State’s distinctive local and global programs and deep partnerships with industry connections exceeded their expectations.
Cecelia spoke with Kent State Today about the importance of her education abroad and extracurricular experiences.
Three Years of Invaluable Experiences
It’s been a whirlwind, dynamic journey since Cecelia stepped foot on campus. In just three years she studied abroad in Florence, Italy; worked in Kent State’s New York City Fashion, worked as a stylist for A Magazine, a fashion, beauty and culture publication on campus; and served on the executive board of Fashion Student Organization. She joined a sorority, participated in campus groups and made lifelong friends.
Cecelia recalls that her time in Florence was one of her favorite experiences at Kent State because her professors had so much industry knowledge and made students feel like they were in a “real-world environment with our projects.”
“I learned a ton there,” Cecelia said of her time in Florence. “They gave us plenty of time to do our own traveling and exploring. In addition to the tour opportunities, they took us to Milan to factories and we met with different designers."
Melinda said she was equally as impressed with the experiences and resources that Kent State made available to Cecelia.
“As a school counselor and as a parent, I’m just as pleased as punch for her experiences at Kent State,” Melinda said. “I can’t believe how affordable it was. She couldn’t have had the success she’s having without the resources and the support at Kent State.”
Internships Lead to Manhattan Job
Cecelia's internships became a testament to Kent State's commitment to real-world experience. Her first summer internship with Marc Nelson Denim in Knoxville, Tennessee, offered more than just fashion training. She learned all things fashion and traveled to Florida and Chicago all the while giving back to the community.
Along the way, Melinda kept Diacon abreast of Cecelia’s progress. In one of the emails, Diacon spoke about the university's annual Fashion Show, noting, "I love interacting with our student designers and our student merchandising majors at that event ... and to hear where they are going after graduation...which includes employment across America and abroad."
By her third year, Cecelia decided to accelerate her studies and graduate early. While studying in New York, she served an internship in New York at Scabal, a luxury menswear and textile company based in Belgium. Cecelia is happy to report that on Jan. 6 she will begin a full-time job in Manhattan with Scabal.
“Being able to use the resources and making them so accessible to us has been absolutely invaluable to me,” Cecelia said. “I’m very thankful for Kent and the connections it has given me and all the friendships. It’s a great place.”