Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship is a United States Cultural Exchange Program.Named after the late Congressman Benjamin Gilman, former chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, the program is administered by the United States Department of State and supported in its implementation by the Institute of International Education.
The CIEE Alumni Global Network is a group of more than 350,000 alumni from all CIEE programs, living and working in over 176 countries around the world. This includes past participants of CIEE Study Abroad, Teach Abroad, Work and Travel USA, Congress-Bundestag Youth Exchange , High School Abroad, Baltic-American Freedom Foundation , and more.
Named after Gilman is the Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship, a program for Pell Grant eligible American college students to study or intern abroad administered by the United States Department of State. [9] Study abroad is a special experience for every student who participates.
The scholarship of application (also later called the scholarship of engagement) that goes beyond the service duties of a faculty member to those within or outside the University and involves the rigor and application of disciplinary expertise, with results that can be shared with and/or evaluated by peers (i.e., Cooperative State Research ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
Benjamin Ives Gilman was born in New York in 1852, the son of Winthrop Sargent Gilman and the former Abia Swift Lippincott. [1] He attended Williams College (class of 1872) but did not graduate on account of health problems. He joined his family's banking business in New York.
This home, as well as the Benjamin Clark Gilman House which is also owned by the academy, were built for the Gilman family, a group of prominent Exeter donors. The Gilman House is a large colonial white clapboard home with a gambrel roof hipped at one end, a leaded fanlight over the front door and a wide panelled entry hall. [112]
Elisabeth Coit Gilman was born in New Haven, Connecticut, on December 25, 1867, to Daniel Coit Gilman and Mary Ketcham Gilman. Elisabeth was the second child, and had an older sister named Alice. Their mother, Mary, died in 1869 and, as a result, were cared for by Daniel's sister Louise. [1]