This is the VOA Special English Education Report.
The
Ford Foundation in the United States is a charitable organization that calls
itself "a partner for social change." It has a study program
currently available to college graduates in twenty-two countries and territories in Asia,
Africa and Latin America.
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| Ford fellowship recipient Caroline Kathomi returned to Kenya where she works with epilepsy patients |
The
Ford Foundation International Fellowships Program offers graduates a chance to
continue their studies. The aim is to help them learn ways to solve problems in
their own countries.
Joan Dassin is the executive director of the
program.
JOAN DASSIN: "Let's say you have an undergraduate
law degree but you really want to be able to bring international human rights
standards to bear on a particular conflict in your part of the world. So in
that case we would send you to a program in Geneva on international human
rights that would give you the international markers that you need to press
cases in your particular country setting, and so on. So we work very closely
with students not so much about what they want to study, but more about what
problem are you trying to solve."
About
two-thirds of the fellows study in the United States, Canada or Europe. The
others study in their home country or region.
The
Ford Foundation started the program eight years ago with two hundred eighty
million dollars. Fellows are chosen by independent local committees. They get
advice about which schools and programs could help them reach their goals. The
foundation says ninety-five percent are accepted into a university graduate
program within one year of getting a fellowship.
Almost four thousand fellows have been
chosen since the first were named in June of two thousand one. As of last
December almost half had completed their fellowships.
The Ford Foundation says the goals include
strengthening democratic values, reducing poverty and increasing international
cooperation. Another goal is to fight "brain drain" -- to make sure
fellows return home to use their educations. The foundation says more than
eighty percent have done that.
The
program pays all costs, including support services like training in computer
skills, academic writing and a foreign language. Partner organizations in the
home countries stay in contact with the fellows throughout the program.
Joan
Dassin says the fellowships are aimed especially at those with the fewest
resources available.
JOAN DASSIN: "People from all walks of life, and
particularly from rural areas or marginalized communities, can have access to
higher education at the most advanced levels, and our program provides that
opportunity."
And
that's the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Nancy Steinbach.
You can find us at voaspecialenglish.com, or on Twitter and YouTube at VOA
Learning English. I'm Steve Ember.