Tag Archives: Council for Christian Colleges and Universities

Emily Entsminger (fourth from left) with some Uganda Studies Program (USP) staff

From student to director: Emily’s USP Journey


Emily Entsminger (fourth from left) with some Uganda Studies Program (USP) staff
Emily Entsminger (fourth from left) with some Uganda Studies Program (USP) staff

By Kefa Senoga
In 2007, Emily Entsminger left her home country, the United States (US), for the first time to come to Uganda as a student under the Uganda Studies Program (USP). In 2022, she returned to Uganda to serve on the USP staff as the Student Life Coordinator. In June 2024, she assumed the role of USP Director.

USP is a study abroad program hosted by Uganda Christian University (UCU) and under the Uganda Partners non-profit organization. It offers USA and Canadian Christian university students a chance to immerse themselves in Ugandan culture, academics and community life for a semester

Emily says that during her time as a student in the USP, she developed a deep interest in the program and kept the thought of working with USP in mind, even after she had returned to the US.

Emily Entsminger, new USP Director
Emily Entsminger, new USP Director

“I paid attention if there was a job open at any time but there wasn’t one that my skills particularly fit until 2022 a Student Life Coordinator position opened and my background was in student care and pastoral care,” Emily says.

She applied for the job while in the US and was successful.  She loved it so much, and served in it for the past two years.

She recounts that when her predecessor, Rachel Robinson, took a sabbatical in August 2023, she stepped in to fill the role temporarily as Acting Director. Once it was confirmed that Rachel would not be returning, Emily officially assumed the position in June 2024.

Emily says that she believes in the program, which is why she is so passionate about her role as its director.

“I have personally experienced the positive effects of this program,” Emily said. “I can attest to its uniqueness, and the growth, learning and cultural engagement…as well as the way its students return changed.”

She adds that stepping into the role of Director is a privilege for her, allowing her to give back to the program that impacted her so deeply. At the same time, she notes that being involved in something as a participant is quite different from leading it, drawing a connection between her time as a USP student and her current role as director.

Emily reveals that what she loves the most about her job is seeing students grow as she did over the course of four months in the program.

“Students grow, evolve and are exposed to various aspects of life,” Emily said.  “I truly enjoy witnessing their journey from day one of having no idea of how to get around to successfully navigating everything by the end of the semester.”

She points out one of the opportunities students have that stretches them is staying with a host family– local, Mukono, husbands, wives and children.  Students spend two weeks or an entire semester immersed with these families to build connections and relationships with them and the surrounding community. From Emily’s experience as a student, her host family asked her to be the Godparent to their daughter, and she counts this as one of her most memorable moments in Uganda.

Emily, when a student, with her host mom
Emily, when a student, with her host mom

Reflecting on her experience as a student in the USP, Emily highlights that the program provided her with a foundation for thinking and engaging with the world. She says the involvement requires adapting to many unknowns and different rhythms—like knowing how to buy groceries and food back home but having to learn how to do it in Uganda. USP students adjust to navigate everyday life in a new context.

Emily continues to narrate that she first realized she wanted to study abroad, especially in Africa, while pursuing her undergraduate degree in Christian Education and Youth Ministry at Northwestern College in Orange City, Iowa, which is part of the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities (CCCU).  The CCCU has more than 150 post-secondary institution members in the U.S. and Canada and more than 30, including UCU, from an additional 19 countries.

She says that the study abroad option that her school offered was with USP, so she applied, and that’s how she ended up in Uganda. 

One discovery by USP participants relates to the misperception of Uganda. 

“You realize that with what you have seen in the mediaFor instance, students may come thinking that everyone in Uganda lives in a grass-thatched hut,” Emily said. “But it’s not what you find; it’s there but that’s not everybody’s life here.”

Emily elaborates that many students enjoy their time in Uganda due to the warm personalities of its people and the pleasant weather, among other factors. As director, she emphasizes that one of her top priorities is to support students in having a good experience in Uganda.

“Helping maintain USP and make it a program of excellence is my priority, but I am passionate about increasing student support, engaging students and supporting them through their experience,” Emily says.

She adds that another initiative she’s embarking on will be addressing mental health needs among students who come for the program.

With her experience as a campus pastor in her native state of Iowa and background in religious education, including a Master of Divinity with a specialization in Spiritual Formation that she obtained from George Fox University, Oregon, Emily remains committed to upholding the values of Christianity and faith as top priorities in the program at UCU.

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To support Uganda Christian University programs, students, activities, and services, go to  www.ugandapartners.org  and click on the “donate” button, or contact UCU Partners Executive Director, Mark Bartels, at  m.t.bartels@ugandapartners.org.


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UCU International Connections

Linda Uhligo, a UCUstudent from Germany, with a UCU Sunday School child. (UCU Partners photo)

By Twesiime Jordan McGurran

Universities and colleges around the world are seeking to form partnerships, collaborations, and connections with other educational institutions, governments, civil society organizations, churches, and various types of organizations. These partnerships are designed to enhance the work within the universities – in their molding of students, research potential, service to the larger society, financial or technological growth, and the building of goodwill among communities from different regions of the world.

Uganda Christian University (UCU) has been working on building such connections since the University’s formal inception in 1997.

The longest in existence and widest impacting in terms of student numbers outside the continent of Africa is the Uganda Studies Program (USP), a study abroad program of the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities (CCCU). This USA-based Christian higher education consortium is composed of more than 180 institutions around the world, including UCU. Twice a year – in the Advent (September) and Easter (January) semesters – the UCU community welcomes about 25-30 students from North America. Mark Bartels, Uganda Christian University Partners executive director, and his wife, Abby, started USP about 15 years ago. In that time, USP has skillfully hosted over 800 students at UCU.

While there are several clusters of international students who come from other parts of Africa, including the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Sudan and Kenya, USP is the largest contingent of students who come to UCU from outside the African continent.

Beyond USP, UCU also has several current and ongoing international collaborations between UCU and other schools, governments, or civil society organizations.  These include but are not limited to:

  • The Faculty of Journalism, Media, and Mass Communications,between 2014 and 2018, in partnership with the Norwegian Teacher Academy (NLA) and the University of Kwazulu-Natal of South Africa under the Norwegian Programme for Capacity Development in Higher Education and Research (NORHED),has provided faculty opportunities for postgraduate studies, including MA and PhD studies, in communication-related courses in Norway.  Additionally, in the past, occasionally NLA undergraduates have come to study at UCU.
  • The child-focused international NGO, Compassion International, regularly has a contingent of students at UCU who are have been supported through their university studies by their Compassion sponsors. They have their own association and fellowship on campus.
  • The Law Faculty maintains several relationships with law schools outside of the country. Among these are: 1) partnership with the University of Cincinnati (Ohio) College of Law, where a few UCU graduates have gone for postgraduate studies and from which some Cincinnati visits have occurred at UCU: and 2) Regent University (Virginia)’s Law School collaboration with UCU for over five years in various capacities that include hosting some short-term study trips and internships for Regent students in Uganda.
  • UCU’s Social Work and Social Administration Department has collaborated for several years with the Social Work department at Radford University in Virginia related to social work educational experiences and research in Uganda.
  • Trinity International University, Illinois, has sent students (usually during May) for “Global Experience” trips to see Uganda and engage with UCU students.
  • Internationale Hochschule Liebenzell, a German theological college, is a new partnership with students coming from Germany to study at UCU for at least a semester.(Later this week, UCU Partners will post a separate story on one of these students.)
  • Bethel University (Minnesota) has a 14-year (since 2005), bilateral partnership with the Nursing Department that has borne much fruit for UCU – including a degree completion and masters program in nursing.  There have been eight groups of UCU students who have spent 6-10 weeks at Bethel, while some students from Bethel also have come to learn at UCU. 
  • Recently, UCU has been in talks with Tsinghua University, a well-ranked post-secondary institution in Beijing, China, to formalize a partnership related to research, educational exchange, and technological development.

Beyond these international connections, UCU students can be found pursuing further studies, completing internships, or employed in places such as the UK, Belgium, India, China, and the United States.

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COMING THURSDAY (February 28, 2019)…The UCU Partners blog will publish an interview with one of its international students.

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For more information about how you can support Uganda Christian University to continue to form these international partnerships and/or to become a partner, please contact Mark Bartels, UCU Partners executive director, at mtbartels@gmail.com. Also, follow us on FacebookLinkedIn, and Instagram.