Text Only
Search Special English

Coming to America as a Fulbrighter

17 January 2007
Download Audio - MP3 audio clip
Listen in RealAudio audio clip

This is the VOA Special English Education Report.

We come to the twentieth week of our series on higher education in the United States.  Today we answer two e-mails from Thailand.  A refugee from Burma and another listener in Thailand both want to know more about the Fulbright Program.

The Fulbright Program gives Americans a chance to study, teach or do research in other countries.  And it gives people in other countries a chance to do the same in America.

Hala al-Sarraf, an Iraqi Fulbright scholar, appears before lawmakers in Congress in July of last year
Hala al-Sarraf, an Iraqi Fulbright scholar, appears before lawmakers in Congress in July of last year
Fulbright grants are given to graduate students, scholars and professionals.  There is also a Fulbright exchange program just for teachers and administrators. 

Each year about six thousand people receive Fulbright grants.  The United States government pays most of the costs.  Foreign governments and schools help by sharing costs and providing other support.

The Fulbright Program operates in about one hundred fifty countries.  Around two hundred seventy thousand Fulbrighters have taken part over the years.

Legislation by Senator William Fulbright established the program in nineteen forty-six.  He saw educational exchange as a way to help people understand other ideas and ways of life.  Senator Fulbright also believed the program could educate future world leaders.

In nineteen sixty-eight, the Foreign Language Teaching Assistant Program began.  This Fulbright program brings foreign teachers to the United States to work with high school or college students.

Two other Fulbright programs that offer ways to come to the United States are the foreign student and visiting scholar programs.  The Foreign Student Program brings graduate students to study and do research at a college or university.  The Visiting Scholar Program brings foreign experts to speak and do research for up to a year. 

The list of countries in the Fulbright Program changes each year.  And the requirements may differ from country to country.

You can learn more about the program from the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs at the State Department.  We have a link to the program's Web site at voaspecialenglish.com.  Or do a search on the Internet for "Fulbright Program." 

You can also contact the local Fulbright Commission or American Embassy in your country for more information. 

And that's the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Nancy Steinbach.  To send us e-mail, write to special@voanews.com.  I'm Steve Ember.

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version
  Featured Story
Where Did the English Language Come From?  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Study Shows Limits in Helping Children Deal With Conflict | Alcohol Abuse and U.S. Troops Back From War  Audio Clip Available
Stopping to Smell the Roses, and a Lot More, at the U.S. Botanic Garden  Audio Clip Available
Getting Started Raising Sheep  Audio Clip Available
America's 'Lost Colony': A Story Whose Ending Remains to Be Written  Audio Clip Available
Simple Technologies with High Aims  Audio Clip Available
Bo Diddley, 1928-2008: Remembering One of the Fathers of  Rock and Roll  Audio Clip Available
Doughboy: Military Expressions  Audio Clip Available
Georgia Attack Heightens Concerns About Wider Aims of Russia  Audio Clip Available
Americans Keep Close to Home for 'Staycations'  Audio Clip Available