Publications and Reports

Inaugural Meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences International Advisory Committee


The International Advisory Committee (IAC) was established at the onset of 2022. Its primary purpose is to provide strategic advisory input to the FAS Dean in support of the ongoing development, launch, and implementation of the undergraduate arts and sciences education programme commencing in September 2023. The IAC comprises an esteemed group of international experts and scholars in higher education administration and academe in the liberal arts and sciences. The group also includes leadership from several agencies and activities of the AKDN including the University of Central Asia. All fifteen members of the IAC convened in a hybrid meeting mode for their inaugural meeting from March 9 to 11, 2022 in Karachi, Pakistan. 

The objectives of the inaugural IAC meeting were three-fold: 

  1. engage with plans and direction for the launch, 

  2. explore connections for collaboration, and 

  3. discuss the long- term agenda for the Committee. 

Five interrelated themes emerged from the meeting. The emergent themes form the basis of this meeting report. They are: 

  1. Student Recruitment, Fostering Access, and Building Inclusion and Community; 

  2. Approaches to Building and Organizing Faculty; 

  3. Experiential Learning: Principles for the Breadth of Modalities; 

  4. Curriculum Matters; and 

  5. AKU and the Identity of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences in Pakistan. 


Future of Learning - Day of Dialogue​

day of dialogue group picture.jpg

The Aga Khan University (AKU) aims to respond to foreseeable future needs of the countries it serves, doing so through new educational programmes set at the highest standards possible, in teaching, research and/or service. From its earliest days, the University foresaw the indispensability of a liberal education as emanating from the need for capacities to make the myriad adjustments modern life would require, of intellectual, cultural and moral kinds that only a general education can provide. Subsequently, and with a plurality of invaluable contributions on its design and development over some two decades, the inaugural Faculty of Arts and Sciences in Pakistan (FAS) was granted with an approval in 2018 for a launch on Stadium Road campus in Karachi. Against a tradition of learning from global best practice, the Day of Dialogue to discuss “the Future of Leaning” as it pertains to the launch of FAS was held on 2nd and 3rd March, 2020 in Providence, Rhode Island at Brown University, who served as the event’s generous co-host.

​With the foundational philosophy, aims and overarching structure of the FAS programme in place, the Day of Dialogue sought to unpack with participants experiences in launching and leading undergraduate arts and sciences education, to draw out lessons learn, and to deliberate on the strategic approaches to programmatic design and delivery that would be contextually relevant and in support of the AKU’s vision, mission, guiding principles and values. 

A sample of the key guiding questions steering the Dialogue included:​

  1. How might FAS fit within the wider, evermore comprehensive university setting?

  2. How will we underwrite success in learning and teaching with an interdisciplinary ethos?

  3. What constitutes the ‘student life course’? How can we help students navigate their course? 

  4. What does effective academic governance look like?​​​

Accordingly, the Dialogue convened leadership and scholars from higher education across USA​ and Canada, but primarily from the rich concentration of renowned liberal arts colleges in New England. Participants held considerable expertise in governance and administration, academic affairs including teaching and learning, and student experience and services. AKU Trustee Dr. Lisa Anderson, AKU alumni and members of the Pakistani diaspora now leading academia in USA, and participation from leaders of AKDN institutions in North America all served as strategic interlocutors with their contextual understanding of AKU and Pakistan. Importantly, the Dialogue featured a panel of Brown students from first years to a recent graduate, who provided insights into the whole student experience and where improvements might be made. In sum, there were over 30 participants representing 17 institutions.

Read the Report