Scholar crosses globe to tap into flow of ideas

by Andy Poon
Staff writer

An afternoon picnic with a patient cousin opened the floodgate to Maqsood Khan’s
present-day curiosity in irrigation engineering.

Khan is currently researching the movement of irrigation water in soil in
pursuit of his doctorate degree through the Individual Interdisciplinary Studies
Graduate Program (IISGP) at UBC.

He recounts how during Grade 11, he accompanied his cousin, a civil engineer,
on a picnic in his home province of Balochistan, Pakistan. During the idyllic
outing, Khan and his cousin encountered a weir — an irrigation structure that
measures water flow in irrigation canals and channels — and the teenager asked
his cousin how it worked.

“I was really interested in his explanation and how irrigation water management
would help conserve water for the farmers,” says Khan.

That incident helped him decide to pursue a career in agricultural and irrigation
engineering.

As a youngster he had always been aware that his province, though semi-arid,
produced more than half the apples and grapes in the country by using ground
water as its main irrigation source.

“Water is scarce in my country,” he says. “The occasional rain during growing
season is a bonus to crops to be irrigated.”

After he finished his undergraduate degree, Khan went to work for the Balochistan
Dept. of Agriculture. But remembering his father’s stories of how modern farming
practices doubled crop yields in Australia, and realizing that many of the best
agricultural minds in his country had studied abroad, Khan decided to study
overseas.

After completing his master’s degree in North Carolina and starting a PhD
at Colorado State University, Khan transferred to UBC to complete his research
through IISGP.

Founded in 1971, IISGP is the first program of its kind in Canada. It lets
students design their own programs in consultation with a faculty supervisory
committee to include more than one disciplinary field in their research.

The program was conceived as a “practical response to the desire for liberalization
in the academic organization of knowledge,” says Fine Arts Prof. Rhodri Windsor-Liscombe,
chair of IISGP. There are currently 75 graduate students registered in the program.

Khan firmly believes in the value of an interdisciplinary approach to his
research work.

“Nowadays, you can’t solve any problem alone — you need an interdisciplinary
approach,” says Khan, who works under Bio-Resource Engineering Prof. Sietan
Chieng.

Khan isn’t sure whether he will return to Pakistan after he earns his doctorate
but he has high praise for his time in B.C.

“The best thing about Vancouver and UBC is the multiculturalism,” he says.
“I have made friends from Canada, India, China, and other countries here.”


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