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Pambookian in first-generation immigrants honored by Gov. Strickland

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  • Pambookian in first-generation immigrants honored by Gov. Strickland

    US Fed News
    July 11, 2009 Saturday 8:42 AM EST



    PAMBOOKIAN AMONG FIRST-GENERATION IMMIGRANTS HONORED BY GOVERNOR TED
    STRICKLAND

    PORTSMOUTH, Ohio, July 10 -- Shawnee State University issued the
    following news release:

    Dr. Hagop S. Pambookian, professor emeritus of psychology at Shawnee
    State University, Portsmouth, Ohio, was among several first-generation
    immigrants honored by Governor Ted Strickland for significant
    contributions made to the state of Ohio. The honorees were hosted at a
    reception recently in Cincinnati. "This celebration was especially
    meaningful for me," Pambookian said, "because it was about ways that
    we, as immigrants, have contributed to the diversity of Ohio and have
    worked to bring about a greater awareness of international cultures
    and issues. That has been important to me my entire life. I believe
    the more we learn about other cultures, the more we see that we are
    all the same - and the more we appreciate the world in which we live."

    Pambookian, the son of Armenian genocide survivors, came to the United
    States from Lebanon in August 1961 for his advanced degrees in
    psychology, after earning his undergraduate degree from the American
    University of Beirut (AUB). In the U.S., he received a master's degree
    from Columbia University Teachers College, New York City, and a
    doctorate degree from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. His
    contributions to the state of Ohio began in 1987 when he moved to
    Portsmouth to serve as associate professor of psychology at Shawnee
    State University. He developed the psychology degree program and began
    contributing to the internationalization of the University. He
    initiated the annual "International Awareness Week" celebration;
    organized and hosted visiting Fulbright scholars from Hungary,
    Romania, South Korea, Russia, the People's Republic of China, and
    Armenia; and played a leadership role in the establishment and
    operation of the Ohio International Consortium. Following Pambookian's
    year-long Ohio Humanities Council grant on "Perestroika, Changes, and
    Developments in the USSR: What Next?" project, he played a key role in
    establishing the first international exchange program at SSU with the
    University of Nizhny Novgorod in Russia. In May 1997, the Ohio
    Education Association honored him with the "Paul Swaddling Award" for
    his contributions to international understanding and peace. In
    addition to his contributions to Shawnee State University, Pambookian
    has contributed to life and culture of Ohio statewide and globally. He
    has promoted the state of Ohio, as well as the U.S., around the world
    in more than 20 countries, as international conference presenter and
    guest lecturer at universities. Recently, he gave a keynote address on
    "Psychology around the World: The Asian Experience" at the 2nd Asian
    Psychological Association Convention in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and,
    earlier, on the "International Dimensions of Psychology for a New
    Century" at the 56th Annual Convention of the International Council of
    Psychologists in Melbourne, Australia. For his U.S. and international
    involvement and contributions, Pambookian has been honored by various
    professional and civic organizations. He is a Fellow of the American
    Psychological Association and an Emeritus Member of the Phi Delta
    Kappa, an international association for educators. He has been elected
    a foreign member of the International Academy of Psychological
    Sciences in Yaroslavl, Russia; the Armenian Philosophical Academy in
    Yerevan, Armenia; and the Academy of Pedagogical-Psychological
    Sciences in Yerevan, Armenia. Pambookian has been a Senior Fulbright
    Fellow, 1978-79, in the USSR and taught psychology at the Yerevan
    State University in Yerevan, Armenia. He was the first U.S. scholar to
    receive a nine-month long Fulbright Award for the Soviet Union and the
    first Fulbright Fellow to teach psychology in the Republic of
    Armenia. As part of his ongoing donations and commitment to
    scholarship, the "Pambookian Foundation" was initiated and the
    Fundamental Library of the Armenian Academy of Sciences, the Republic
    of Armenia, now has more than 3,300 English language psychology books
    and various psychology journals Pambookian donated. "Just as I believe
    we learn from other cultures, I also believe people and social
    scientists in other countries can learn from the western point of
    view," Pambookian said. "By sharing knowledge, experiences, and
    cultures, the world becomes a better place."
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