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For students dreaming of winning the cross-cultural holy grail that is the Fulbright scholarship – thus earning the fully-funded opportunity to research or teach overseas – there's good news ...
The Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board is a twelve-member board of educational and public leaders appointed by the President of the United States that determines general policy and direction for the Fulbright Program and approves all candidates nominated for Fulbright Scholarships.
Since 2010, the annual "Juergen Mulert Memorial Award on Mutual Understanding" is granted to current or former participants of the Fulbright Program. The winners include Daniel Köhler, [ 9 ] Janosch Delcker, [ 10 ] Sherief El-Helaifi, [ 11 ] The Atlantic Review, [ 12 ] Oksana Buzhdygan, [ 13 ] and Robert Lepenies.
The J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board was established by the United States Congress for the purpose of supervising the Fulbright Program and certain programs authorized by the Fulbright-Hays Act and for the purpose of selecting students, scholars, teachers, trainees, and other persons to participate in the educational exchange programs.
Zandieh won a 2009-2010 grant from the Fulbright Program. [5] This program is the "most widely recognized and prestigious international exchange program in the world." [10] She is one of 40 Kentucky students chosen and listed with the United States Department of State as being a filmmaking student from Turkey. [5]
CSB and SJU have produced four Rhodes Scholars [14] and nine Truman Scholars. [15] CSB and SJU are also a consistent producer of Fulbright scholarship winners. From 2013 to 2020, 39 students from CSB/SJU received Fulbright Scholarships. [16] CSB/SJU has also been recently recognized as a top producer of Peace Corps volunteers. [17]
A Fulbright scholar, her studies took her to Yale University where she completed her Ph.D. in 1957 under Nathan Jacobson. She returned to Spain three years later with a scholarship to Instituto de Matemáticas Jorge Juan del CSIC. At the end of the grant, she moved to Canada where her first PhD student was Robert Moody. [2]
Laura J. Snyder (born 1964) is an American historian, philosopher, and writer. She is a Fulbright Scholar, is a Life Member of Clare Hall, Cambridge, was the first Leon Levy/Alfred P. Sloan fellow at The Leon Levy Center for Biography at The Graduate Center, CUNY, and is the recipient of an NEH Public Scholars grant.