Advertisement
Advertisement
Fulbright
[ fool-brahyt ]
noun
- (James) William, 1905–95, U.S. politician: senator 1945–74.
- Informal.
- a grant awarded under the provisions of the Fulbright Act.
- a person who receives such a grant.
Example Sentences
What the great critic of Vietnam War escalation during the 1960s, Sen. William Fulbright, called “the arrogance of power.”
At 25 he travelled to the United States to study under a Fulbright scholarship, and returned to Bangladesh in 1971 – the same year the country won its independence from Pakistan in a brutal, bloody war.
Lithgow, who has an undergraduate degree from Harvard and was a Fulbright Scholar at the London School of the Arts, spoke with The Associated Press about going back to school.
He studied law and philosophy on a Fulbright scholarship at the University of Oxford, then graduated from Columbia Law School in 1960.
McElroy won a Fulbright fellowship to travel to Yugoslavia in 1988, and five years later, won a second Fulbright fellowship to go to Madagascar.
Advertisement
More About Fulbright
What is Fulbright?
The Fulbright U.S. Student Program, or Fulbright for short, awards recent American college graduates grants to teach English or participate in research projects in other nations.
Fulbright grant recipients, or Fulbrighters, work and live with the people they are teaching or researching with in their host countries. In order to qualify for a Fulbright grant, you must have recently earned a bachelor’s degree, be a graduate student with your field of study related to history, culture, or current events, or have several years of experience performing, studying, or writing in the field for which you apply. Fulbrighters may be sent to countries within the East Asia-Pacific, Europe, the Middle East, South and Central Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and other regions.
When is Fulbright?
The application process for Fulbright grants typically begins in late March or early April and concludes in the fall. The Fulbright screening committee then reviews applications until early winter. Winners are notified as early as January of the following year.
In 2021, the Fulbright application process began on March 31 and closed on October 12. The screening committee began reviewing applications on November 1, and winners were notified on January 31, 2022.
More information and context on Fulbright
In 1945 Senator J. William Fulbright proposed a bill that would use surplus war funds to create exchange student programs to promote understanding between countries through education, culture, and science. The Fulbright program was signed into law in 1946 and began receiving funds from the government.
Today, the Fulbright program gives out over 2,000 grants a year and has served over 400,000 Fulbrighters since its creation. It receives a majority of its funding from Congress and the Bureau of Education and Cultural Affairs, but it also receives donations from various host countries and a collection of charities that work to promote diversity and inclusion in the program.
What are some terms that often get used in discussing Fulbright?
How is Fulbright discussed in real life?
Receiving a Fulbright grant is considered the opportunity of a lifetime for many culturally minded students.
My daughter is a Fulbright scholar!!! How could I be more proud. #genuis. #burstingwithpride.
— Tim Daly (@TimmyDaly) August 1, 2013
Humbled, thrilled, and a little heartbroken to share news: I will be leaving my Boston home at the end of August for a Fulbright fellowship…
— Martine Powers (@martinepowers) July 11, 2014
International Education is important to #Fulbright because it creates mutual understanding. Let's build bridges towards peace! #IEW2014
— The Fulbright Program (@FulbrightPrgrm) November 17, 2014
Try using Fulbright!
True or False?
The Fulbright program supports exchange students coming to the United States.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse