Jingyu Wang named executive director of the Beijing Global Gateway

Author: Colleen Wilcox

Wang Headshot

Notre Dame International is excited to announce that Jingyu Wang has been appointed executive director of the University of Notre Dame’s Beijing Global Gateway.

Jingyu Wang will serve Notre Dame’s students, faculty, and community of alumni, parents, and partners in Beijing by facilitating programs that promote understanding, advance knowledge, and address issues to serve the common good within a local, regional, and global context.

 

Wang previously served as the director of Global Maximum Educational Opportunity (g-MEO) Chengdu Center, an independent study abroad facilitator, where she forged relationships with governments, higher education, private sectors, and non-profit organizations in both China and the United States. She has extensive experience working with study abroad programs in China and abroad, working as a program coordinator at the CIEE program at Peking University and the head Chinese language instructor at the Princeton Beijing program. In January 2018, she was nominated and elected to a position on the Board of Governors for the American Chamber of Commerce in Southwest China.

 

She has served in various roles at universities across the world, including as a research associate on a two-year project funded by the U.S. Department of Education and administered by the Kellogg Institute for International Studies to strengthen Asian Studies at Notre Dame. Additionally, she worked as a lecturer in Chinese at Princeton University and was a contributing author to A Kaleidoscope of China – An Advanced Reader of Modern Chinese through Princeton University Press in 2009.

 

“Jingyu Wang is exceptional not only because of her accomplishments as an administrator and as a Chinese language instructor, but also because of her knowledge of and commitment to Notre Dame,” said Warren von Eschenbach, associate vice president and assistant provost for internationalization.

 

“Her enthusiasm for the University’s mission and international goals was apparent to the selection committee and complemented her proven leadership in facilitating academic engagement in China on behalf of American students and faculty members.”

 

From 2010 to 2012, Wang also assisted the University in initiating the China office, which developed into the Beijing Global Gateway under the guidance of the founding director, Jonathan Noble. He now serves as an assistant provost at Notre Dame International. Wang says she’s excited to reunite with the Notre Dame community.

 

“Wang’s experience and dedication to higher education between the United States and China will advance academic opportunities for Notre Dame faculty and students and expand the Beijing Global Gateway’s partnerships with universities, as well as the public and private sectors,” said Noble.

 

The Beijing Global Gateway is part of NDI’s global network, which includes five Global Gateways in Beijing, Dublin, Jerusalem, London, and Rome; and six Global Centers in Hong Kong, Mexico City, Mumbai, Santiago, São Paulo, and Kylemore Abbey (western Ireland).  

 

Contact: Colleen Wilcox, Notre Dame International, 574-631-2513, cwilcox1@nd.edu

 

Originally published by Colleen Wilcox at international.nd.edu on May 15, 2018.