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SMA Negeri 10 Bengkulu Dapat Program Fulbright, Hana Marisa dari AS 8 Bulan Bergabung sebagai Guru
SMA Negeri 10 Bengkulu Dapat Program Fulbright, Hana Marisa dari AS 8 Bulan Bergabung sebagai Guru KANTOR-BERITA.COM, BENGKULU|| Hana Marisa Semes seorang pendidik dari Amerika Serikat, telah ditunjuk sebagai guru di SMA Negeri 10 Kota Bengkulu selama delapan bulan. Kehadiran Hana sebagai pengajar merupakan bagian dari program kerjasama antara Kedutaan Besar Republik Indonesia (KBRI) denganâŚ
#Abdal Khairi#bahasa Inggris siswa#Fulbright English Teaching Assistant#Guru bahasa Inggris#Hana Marisa Semes#Indonesia-Amerika#Kepala Sekolah#Peningkatan#Pertukaran budaya#Program AMINEF#Program pendidikan internasional#SMA Negeri 10 Bengkulu#Dampak Positif
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FLP MEMOIR BOOK OF THE DAY: Red Henna Blues by Jaspal Kaur Singh
On SALE: https://www.finishinglinepress.com/product/red-henna-blues-by-jaspal-kaur-singh/
Red Henna Blues is a assemblage of #hybrid writing, a #memoir, told through essays, flash fiction, qisse, kahanis, oral narratives, and creative non-fiction pieces. The writings are reimagined dialogues, fables and tales as told by generations of the extended #Singh family, predominantly #women, who travelled from Punjab, #India to Taunggyi, Burma during the #British colonial era, formed families and legends, fell in love and eloped or had arranged marriages, faced joy, estrangement and violence, and after almost half a century later due to the 1962 military coup, were dislocated and fragmented and scattered to many parts of the globe: the stories are of the Japanese occupation of Burma between 1942-45 and of the Allied Bombing on their homes; the âreturnâ home to Punjab in 1946 and the Partition of India in 1947; the journey back to Burma in 1947 as refugees, and then, the Burmese military coup of 1962 when they, once again, became refugees after living for many years under the brutal military regime. While many family members became refugees and exiled, some were either unwilling or unable to migrate and were forced to integrate and follow along on the Burmese Road to Socialism by the Burma Socialist Programme Party. The writing is not about a single person but is a collection of memories and re-memories of selected members of various branches of the close-knit family within the small Sikh community in Taunggyi, #Burma. The pieces are written from the perspective of one member, the middle child of a family of six siblings and five cousins in a joint family of eighteen who, by default, became the repository of stories of gendered violence and resistance within the Sikh, and the larger Indian, community in the diaspora. These are home truths about her/story told through a unique blending of the craft of storytelling, allegories and creative non-fiction hybrid narratives.
Jaspal Kaur Singh, Professor Emerita, English Department, Northern Michigan University, currently teaches courses on Africa and Asia at the School of Writing, Literature, and Film, Oregon State University. She was a Fulbright Senior Fellow in India (2012-2013) and was a Rockefeller Foundation Humanities Fellow at UCLA (1998-1999). Jaspal has published two monographs: Violence and Resistance in Sikh Gendered Identity (2020) and Representation and Resistance: South Asian and African Womenâs Texts at Home and in the Diaspora (2008). She coauthored a book titled, Narrating the New Nation: South African Indian Writing (2018). Jaspal also published three co-edited anthologies titled, Indian Writers: Transnationalisms and Diasporas (2010); Trauma, Resistance, Reconciliation in Post-1994 South African Literature (also in 2010); and Negotiating Gender and Sexuality in Contemporary Turkey (2016). She was an assistant editor for Voice on the Water: Great Lakes Native America Now (2011). Jaspal recently published a poetry collection, Exiles and Pleasures: Taunggyi Dreaming (2023). Many of her poetry and creative work has been published in various journals and anthologies. She has a daughter, Gitanjali Singh, a son, Gautam Singh, and a granddaughter, Karina Singh. She lives in Portland, Oregon.
PRAISE FOR Red Henna Blues by Jaspal Kaur Singh
In Red Henna Blues, Jaspal Kaur Singhâs disarming, beautiful, heartbreaking, redemptive, and entirely sui generis fragmented lyrical memoir, ideas of home and family, estrangement and power are dismantled in the ways that the homelands and communities about which Singh so intricately writes were likewise dismantled. Singhâs work in these essays is an act of rebuilding that which was irrevocably lost, but also an illuminating of the voices which resisted oblivionâwith spirit, with love, with the proof of a different, more humane iteration of power, and with the sort of lyric badassery that braids scream with incantation. These essays dare to pick up the shards of a âshattered kismet,â to exhume that which once âremained submerged in the promise,â (in Singhâs words), andâwithout ever forgetting or forgiving the agents of the shattering and the submergingâfashion them into a fresh story, an unforgettable rebuke, and an aria of the celebration of survival.
âMatthew Gavin Frank, author of Flight of the Diamond Smugglers
Jaspal Singhâs newest book, Red Henna Blues, is a luminous tapestry of memory and collective longing, an affirmation of the enduring presence of familial connections & disconnections across lifetimes. Rooted in many voices and many lands, each story contains the seed of the otherâ the result is a lush and insightful collection that is sure to take its rightful place among the literature of diaspora. But Singhâs writing is so much more than an archive of the war-torn. Here you will find memorable moments of love and resistance, sharpened blades and even sharper-tongued women. This is a book to give your granddaughters, your mothers, yourself. Red Henna Blues is at once a testimony to all that has been lost and all that is worth fighting for.
âPatricia Killelea, Author of Counterglow
In this mesmerizing gathering of essays and vignettes, Jaspal Kaur Singhtakes readers on a moving journey into the Indian diaspora of Burma (todayâs Myanmar), sharply recounting an extended familyâs trials and tribulations through a century of British colonial power and postcolonial violence. In writing that is self-consciously hybrid, she weaves memories and recollections into a generational tapestry that mirrors not only the fragmentation of family throughout the global diaspora, but also the, often tattered, contours of ancient folk tales and oral legends. Most crucially, if these stories accrue into a kind of literary legacy, for family and readers alike, and bear witness to patriarchal violence done to women, girls, and other marginalized groups within colonial and postcolonial/neocolonial contexts, they also act as vehicle for resistance and rewriting, thereby revealing the fierceness of the diasporic life-forces. Although they are suffused with disturbing stories of abuse and psychological and emotional coercion, they are also brimming with the sensual and intoxicating smell of teas and spices, and of bodies in ecstasy and euphoria. As the title (and title story) of this powerful collection suggests, postcolonial/global South womenâwhether in India, Burma, or diasporas elsewhereâsing the blues to this day to protest and to inspire change.
âMichael Wutz, Editor, WeberâThe Contemporary West
In Red Henna Blues, Professor Emerita Jaspal Kaur Singh crafts a multi-genre collection of narratives of the Sikh diaspora via Burma, India, and the United States. Blurring the always suspect distinction between autobiography and fiction, Singhâs memoirs, poetry, essays, and short stories elicit familial and cultural traumas within which there is pleasure and sensuality, sharp strokes of wisdom, and even moments of humor. The people who inhabit Red Henna Blues are sketched evocatively, their humanity resonant with the echoes of linguistic and corporal specificities, and in the poetics of inner lives and outward actions. These âtalesâ evoke the vivid sensory experiences of postcolonial worlds such as Indiaâs, and, in doing so, continue a long tradition of women telling stories that reveal the richness of lives lived in the interstices of violence, displacement, and forgetting. A great pointer for Sikh writers who are yet to arrive!
âSri Craven, Professor, Portland State University
This is a story of Burma and Indiaâs midnight daughters who are endowed with an extraordinary power that enables them to rise above the vicissitudes of life in patriarchy, and in translocation. From her first-hand accounts of war and child abuseâ some of which may be trauma trigger for some of usâto the quaint customs of Shan State, Jaspal Kaur Singh writes with economy and control. One of the most relatable books Iâve read in recent years.
âKo Ko Thett--author of Bamboophobia
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#flpauthor #preorder #AwesomeCoverArt #memoir #read #memoir #India #British #history #women
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Professor Henry W. âHankâ McGee, Jr. (December 31, 1932 - March 17, 2024) was born in Chicago to Henry W. McGee, Sr., the first African American Postmaster, and Attye Belle Truesdale McGee. He had two sisters. He has five sons.
He received a BA from the Medill School of Journalism, Northwestern University. He received his JD from Chicagoâs DePaul University College of Law, he was Law Review Editor in Chief. During Freedom Summer, he served as a lawyer for SNCC members who were arrested for assisting with African American voter registration.
He was awarded the LLM from Columbia University Law School. He was one of the first two Black hires by the UCLA School of Law where he taught Criminal Law and Housing Law. He was the director of the UCLA Center for Afro-American Studies. He received Fulbright teaching and research awards. He retired as professor emeritus from UCLA and became the first faculty member of color to join the ranks of tenured faculty at Seattle University School of Law.
He had visiting invitations in Mexico, the Caribbean, Central and South America, Europe, and Africa. He was a visiting professor at Fordham University and the University of Washington. He was a Visiting Fellow at Oxford University. He co-authored a Housing case book and more than 25 articles in juried law reviews.
He married Victoria Kill (1996) a professor of English at Seattle University. He retired from the Seattle University School of Law and was honored by the Metropolitan King County Council. He received the Arthur Sutherland Public Service Award at UCLA. He was honored with the AALS Clyde Ferguson Award.
He was an accomplished violinist who played in community orchestras including the Seattle Philharmonic Orchestra. He served on the board of Futurewise Seattle and was a Fellow of the Mexican Academy of Private International and Comparative Law. He served as a board member of the Seattle Low Income Housing Institute, a board member of The Breakfast Group, and a member of the Museum Development Board for the Seattle Art Museum. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence #sigmapiphi #alphaphialpha
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Eleven from MIT awarded 2024 Fulbright fellowships
New Post has been published on https://sunalei.org/news/eleven-from-mit-awarded-2024-fulbright-fellowships/
Eleven from MIT awarded 2024 Fulbright fellowships
Eleven MIT undergraduates, graduate students, and alumni have won Fulbright grants to embark on projects overseas in the 2024-25 grant cycle. Two other students were offered awards but declined them to pursue other opportunities.
Funded by the U.S. Department of State, the Fulbright U.S. Student Program offers year-long opportunities for American citizen students and recent alumni to conduct independent research, pursue graduate studies, or teach English in over 140 countries.
MIT has been a Fulbright Top-Producing Institution for five years in a row. MIT students and alumni interested in applying to the Fulbright U.S. Student Program should contact Julia Mongo, MIT Fulbright program advisor, in the Office of Distinguished Fellowships in Career Advising and Professional Development.
April Cheng is a junior studying physics with a minor in mathematics and is fast-tracked to graduate this spring. They will take their Fulbright research grant to the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics in Potsdam, Germany, where they will study different statistical techniques to infer the expansion rate of the universe from gravitational waves. They first developed an interest in gravitational waves and black holes at the MIT LIGO and Caltech LIGO labs, but their research spans a wide range of topics in astrophysics, including cosmology and fast radio bursts. Cheng is passionate about physics education and is heavily involved in developing educational materials for high school Science Olympiads. At MIT, they are a member of the Physics Values Committee, the physics mentorship program, and the MIT Lion Dance team. After Fulbright, Cheng will pursue a PhD in astrophysics at Princeton University, where they have received the Presidentâs Fellowship.
Grace McMillan is a senior majoring in literature and mechanical engineering with a concentration in Russian language. As a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant Award recipient, she will teach at a university in Kazakhstan. McMillanâs interest in Central Asia was sparked by a Russian language immersion program she participated in during her sophomore summer in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, funded by MIT International Science and Technology Initiatives (MISTI). She is excited to help her students learn English to foster integration into the global academic community. During her time at MIT, McMillan has conducted research with faculty in nuclear science; earth, atmospheric, and planetary sciences; and the Digital Humanities Lab. Outside of academics, she has been an active member of her sorority, Sigma Kappa, and has served on the MIT Health Consumersâ Advisory Council for two years. After Fulbright, McMillan hopes to attend law school, focusing on education reform.
Ryan McTigue will graduate this spring with a BS in physics and mathematics and a concentration in Spanish. With a Fulbright award to Spain, he will do research at the University of Valenciaâs Institute of Molecular Science focusing on the physics of two-dimensional multiferroic nanodevices. He is looking forward to improving his Spanish and getting the opportunity to live abroad. At MIT, McTigue became interested in condensed matter physics research with the Checkelsky group, where he focused on engineering materials with flat bands that exhibited correlated electron effects. Outside of research, McTigue has been a mentor in the physics departmentâs mentoring program and a member of the heavyweight menâs crew team. After his Fulbright grant, McTigue will begin a PhD in physics at Princeton University.
Keith Murray â22 graduated from MIT with a BS in computation and cognition and linguistics and philosophy. He will receive his MEng degree in computation and cognition this spring. As a Fulbright Hungary research grantee at the HUN-REN Wigner Research Centre for Physics, Murray will design generative AI models inspired by the primary visual cortex with the goal of making AI models more interpretable. At MIT, Murrayâs research experiences spanned from training mice to perform navigation tasks in virtual reality to theorizing about how neurons might compute modular arithmetic. He was also a member of the menâs heavyweight crew team and the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. After Fulbright, Murray will pursue a PhD in neuroscience at Princeton University.
Maaya Prasad â22 completed her undergraduate education at MIT with degrees in both electrical engineering and creative writing and will graduate this month with an MS in mechanical and ocean engineering. Her thesis research focuses on microplastic detection using optical sensing. Prasadâs Fulbright fellowship will take her to Mauritius, an East African island country located in the Indian Ocean. Here, she will continue her masterâs research at the University of Mauritius and will work with local researchers to implement a microplastic survey system. While at MIT, Prasad joined the varsity sailing team with no prior experience. Her time spent on the water led her to pursue marine research at MIT Sea Grant, and she eventually earned an honorable mention to the 2023 All-American Sailing Team. After Fulbright, Prasad hopes to pursue a PhD in applied ocean engineering.
Anusha Puri is a senior majoring in biological engineering. Her Fulbright award will take her to Lausanne, Switzerland, where she will conduct cancer immunology research at the Swiss Institute for Experimental Cancer Research. At MIT, Puriâs work in the Weinberg Lab focused on understanding mechanisms that drive resistance of breast cancer to immunotherapy. On campus, she founded and serves as president of MITâs premiere stand-up comedy group, Stand-Up CoMITy, leads MITâs Bhangra dance team, and is the editor-in-chief of the MIT Undergraduate Research Journal. She looks forward to engaging with teaching outreach and practicing her French in Switzerland. After her Fulbright grant, she plans to pursue a PhD in biomedical science.
Olivia Rosenstein will graduate this spring with a BS in physics and a minor in French. Her Fulbright will take her to ENS Paris-Saclay in Palaiseau, France, where sheâll deepen her education in atomic, molecular, and optical (AMO) physics. At MIT, Rosenstein has worked in Professor Mark Vogelsbergerâs group researching models of galaxy formation and the early universe, and in Professor Richard Fletcherâs group on an erbium-lithium experiment to investigate quantum many-body dynamics in a degenerate mixture. In France, she will expand on the skills she developed in Fletcherâs lab by contributing to a project using optical tweezer arrays to study dipolar interactions. After Fulbright, Rosenstein plans to return to the United States to pursue a PhD in experimental AMO at Caltech.
Jennifer Schug will receive this spring an MEng degree in the Climate, Environment, and Sustainability track within the MIT Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. During her Fulbright year in Italy, she will conduct research on carbon storage in the Venice lagoon at the University of Padua. Schug is excited to build upon her research with the Terrer Lab at MIT, where she is currently investigating the effectiveness of forestation as a carbon sequestration strategy. She also looks forward to improving her Italian language skills and learning about Italian history and culture. Before beginning Fulbright this fall, Schug will study ecological preservation in Sicily this summer through an MIT-Italy collaboration with the University of Catania. After Fulbright, she hopes to continue researching nature-based solutions as climate change mitigation strategies.
Vaibhavi Shah â21 earned a BS in biological engineering and in science, technology, and society at MIT, where she was named a Goldwater Scholar. She is now a medical student at Stanford University. As a Fulbright-Fogarty Fellow in Public Health, Shah will use both her computational and humanities backgrounds to investigate sociocultural factors underlying traumatic surgical injuries in Nepal. While at MIT, she was on the executive board of GlobeMed and the Society of Women Engineers, and she hopes to use those experiences to amplify diverse voices in medicine while on her journey to becoming a neurosurgeon-scientist. After Fulbright, Shah will complete her final year of medical school.
Charvi Sharma is a senior studying computer science and molecular biology with a minor in theater arts. As a Fulbright English teaching assistant in Spain, she is excited to engage in cross-cultural exchange while furthering her skills as a teacher and as a leader. In addition to teaching, Sharma looks forward to immersing herself in the countryâs vibrant traditions, improving her Spanish proficiency, and delving into the local arts and dance scene. At MIT, through Global Teaching Labs Spain and her roles as a dynaMIT mentor, an associate advisor, and a captain and president of her dance teams Mirchi and Nritya, Sharma has served as a teacher of both STEM and dance. Her passion for making a difference in her community is also evident through her work with Boston Medical Centerâs Autism Program through the PKG Public Service Center and as an undergraduate cancer researcher in the Yaffe Lab. After Fulbright, Sharma plans to pursue an MD and, ultimately, a career as a clinician-scientist.
Isabella Witham is a senior majoring in biological engineering. As a recipient of the Fulbright U.S.-Korea Presidential STEM Initiative Award, she will conduct research at Seoul National Universityâs Biomimetic Materials and Stem Cell Engineering Lab. Her work will involve creating biomimetic scaffolds for pancreatic cell transplantation to treat type I diabetes. While in South Korea, Witham aims to improve her language skills and explore cultural sites and cities. At MIT, she worked in the Belcher Lab on nanoparticle formulations, was a tutor for MITâs Womenâs Technology Program, and volunteered as a Medlink. After her Fulbright fellowship, she plans to pursue a PhD in biological engineering.
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Create to Communicate: Art Activities for the EFL Classroom

This book is intended for English language teachers who would like to reap the benefits that the visual arts provide, but are unsure of where or how to begin. By providing language objectives matched with art ideas and guidelines, this book seeks to use the arts as a tool to build and strengthen English reading, writing, listening, and speaking skills and develop the confidence students need to take risks and explore within a new language. Designed to supplement regular coursework, the purpose of this book is not to provide art lessons, but rather to provide ideas of how to incorporate the arts into the language classroom to make English accessible and understandable to students. This book is ideal for Access English Microscholarship Teachers, primary and secondary school EFL teachers worldwide, American Spaces, English language tutors, and English Teaching Assistants (Fulbright)
download from here :
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âí...ěě´ ě§ě§ íë¤ěě...â
I havenât posted as much this semester because my teaching life has taken a complete 180 turn from my last two and a half years. For the first time in my ESL life, Iâm teaching a textbook and designing tests and creating (and then executing) a curriculum in tandem with another teacher at my school. Itâs really great and insanely rewarding but also pretty grueling at times. Currently, Iâm about 1/3 through English speaking tests... which means I have to talk with each student individually for a few minutes in English. Itâs an AWESOME opportunity to talk with my kids and to get to know them better but also it means Iâm booked solidly between 8:40 a.m. and 10:30 p.m. My goal is to finish all of my speaking tests in two weeks... which is an ambitious feat to say the least. My breaks, meal times, and the entirety of night study is booked because of these tests. Yesterday, during my last test of the day, during the last question, my student was answering perfectly and mid-way through a sentence she just burst into tears. It was like something from a movie, almost. One second, answering with perfect grammar, and the next sentence absolutely weeping. Of course, I freaked out and started going âOMG! What happened?! Are you okay?!â The only thing she can choke out is âěě´ ëŞťí´ě 미ěí´ě ě¤...â (Iâm sorry because I canât speak English). And because I am who I am, I start crying too. So both of us are there just crying and hugging each other in the middle of a huge classroom when the super-strict old-school head teacher pokes his head in, sees us and goes âí ěě´ ě§ě§ íë¤ěě...â (Wow.... English is really difficult). Womp womp. Life is hard and speaking tests are hard and teaching is hard but itâs really easy to love the people in my life. It was a low moment but itâs also really funny thinking about it now. (And I feel a lot less stressed after crying about it, actually). tldr: I think teaching is hard, my students think english is hard, and my head teacher (possibly) thinks Iâm crazy.
#fulbright korea#fulbright eta#fulbright english teaching assistant#fulbright scholar#tesl#tesol#teacher life#language barrier#korean language#south korean student#south korea#school life
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Interested in what my apartment looks like in Malta? Â Here is a quick tour of the place! https://youtu.be/W8hAwYAGBBk
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Duane Smith launches new event to recognize students efforts in applying for fellowships and scholarships
Duane Smith launches new event to recognize students efforts in applying for fellowships and scholarships
Dr. Duane Smith was hired in February 2020 for scholarship and fellowship advising for the Center of Career Engagement and Opportunity (CEO). There were plans for a luncheon last year for students who applied but those were cut short by the COVID-19 pandemic. This year, Smith organized the Annual Scholarship Recognition on Wednesday, April 14, via a virtual platform, Remo, to mimic a conferenceâŚ

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#annual scholarship recognition#ceo#duane smith#fellowships#Fulbright Study/Research and English Teaching Assistant Awards#Princeton-in-Latin-America Program#The Barry Goldwater Scholarship#The Benjamin A. Gilman Scholarship#The Charles B. Rangel Fellowship#The China-U.S. Scholars Program (CUSP)#The Critical Languages Scholarship#The Japan Exchange and Teaching (JET) Program#The Marshall Scholarship#The National Science Foundation â Graduate Research Fellows Award#The Thomas R. Pickering Fellowship#The USAID Donald M. Payne International Development Graduate Fellowship Program
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New Beginningsâ
ď¸

Hello and thank you to anyone and everyone who has come across my blog! đđ§ż
In case you arenât up to speed I moved to BogotĂĄ, Colombia đ¨đ´ a few weeks ago to start my Fulbright English Teaching Assistant fellowship. Many of you that personally know me are probably wondering why I didnât share this sooner... but honestly I packed my bags the night before and hopped on my flight without much preparation. I knew the day was approaching but with all the uncertainty in my life this past year, I didnât wanna get my hopes up in case for whatever reason my program was canceled. In addition, for those of you who may not already know, I lost my father very unexpectedly in March of this year, that has left me with this incredibly heavy feeling I carry along everyday. All this trauma has ultimately cost me some of my friendships, made me feel so BITTER and, quite frankly made me dread having to start each day all over again. However, Iâm hoping to change this and not allow myself to remain in the mindset of being a victim to all the loss and tragedies Iâve experienced in the past year. Because I believe that if my dad could see me right now, heâd be so proud and brought to tears to know all the love,support, and hard work my mom and him showed me has paid off. And finally understanding that, I know that I will be okay. (I totally cried while typing that đ
)
Anyways- now that Iâve prefaced this with all my emotional baggage đ Iâll tell you a little more about me in general. Iâm originally from Houston,Texas and Mexican-American however, I never really spoke Spanish growing up because it was kinda seen taboo in the 90s to do so. So once I began high school I really started gaining more interest in learning more about my culture and the language. Then, I moved to Cedar Rapids,Iowa to begin college where I decided to minor in Spanish. Going to Coe was such a beautiful experience where I had the opportunity to meet some amazing people from all over the world. It also allowed me to go to Spain (my biggest dream at the time come true!), which made me realize âlike wow.... I really need to improve my Spanish speaking skillsâ because 1. itâll allow me to have a greater connection with my culture 2. itâs super vital if I want to return to the US and begin a career. and 3. I couldnât communicate with my host brother who was 3 years old at the time (yikes đ)
After this experience in Spain, I knew I had to return to a Spanish-speaking country to fully learn the language. This is when I started the application process for Fulbright Colombia and in April of 2020 I got the news that I was a finalist! In May of 2020, I âgraduatedâ from Coe College with my B.A. in Biology & Neuroscience however, my Fulbright was deferred for a full year. Which now knowing what I know about how 2020/2021 played out was probably a blessing in disguise.Â
Iâve now been living in Colombia for a few weeks now, and wow has it been so chaotic! The culture shock is very much a real thing and I can truly say moving here has been one of the most challenging decisions Iâve ever made considering the timing. I have my good days and bad days, especially when Iâm less anxious and able to engage in conversations when doing things as simple as ordering food or an Uber. (which are both pretty essential when living here) We also have to remember we are in the middle of a pandemic so doing things like establishing cell phone service or getting a bus card is a huge headache because you need an appointment to do pretty much anything. In addition, safety here is on a decline due to the desperation of many Colombians and Venezuelans trying to figure out where their next meal is coming from amid the economic decline. Thankfully I am safe and living in a great neighborhood known as Chapinero Alto! Yet, there is still lots for me to learn when it comes to navigating life here in BogotĂĄ.Â
This is where Iâll end my blog today, thanks again for reading! Hopefully my next post will be more insightful of my day to day life.
Besitos, Leslie â¤ď¸
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wishing I had money to travel
I miss japan bc my host sister contacted me and we talked about the new international school sheâs founding, and damn the longing that slammed into me. my year studying in tokyo while living in saitama was a wild fucking ride. I was the second-worst japanese speaker out of 20 people in my program, and the gal with worse japanese than mine hadnât studied the language at all. the nakama textbooks are trash, btw. my host mother and sister are thankfully fluent in english (and korean) but the rest of my family spoke only japanese.Â
naturally, I scored low in the japanese assessment pre-school entry. my writing has always been far better than my reading, bc it was easier to study ahead for. I shit you not, in the 2 years I studied with my US sensei, she got us through fewer kanji characters than a japanese first grader would learn.Â
itâs fine, my hostfam was freaking awesome; I got closest to my host mother and oldest sister (the one now starting a school), and we laugh together bc I used the word çśä¸ instead of ăĄăĄ for my dad. my host sister told me i sounded like a samurai.
over all awesome shit: the prevalence of new experiences, how often I got to do things Iâd never even thought of before. the winter is a lot gentler on my EDS-fibromyalgic body. honestly, for the innumerable ups and downs, it was an overall positive experience. thailand, on the other hand....
between study abroad and a fulbright, Iâve lived in thailand for a total of one year and four months. besides being about 30 baht to 1 us dollar, I could get a whole meal for 30 baht, and the food was amazing. I often had to beg older ladies to downgrade me from five chilies in my somtam to one, but I learned to like things Iâd never would try before: fried morning glories, frog laab, bull-penis soup (you read that right), goat bbq, and a soup containing unnamed pig organsâ˘.
downside: rural thailand, just over 100k people with intermingled farmland. 740 students divided over 18 classes a week, I have to have my own curriculum, and no one tells me over a third of them have learning disabilities and/or adhd until 3 months in. I live in a studio apartment where I canât get into my kitchen without being eaten by mosquitoes bc thai people donât believe in window screens. I make a few friends from my program but never feel quite like I belong there. thereâs a slight creeping misery of being made to wear a skirt everyday, before I realized I was genderqueer on top of being upset by the sexism. my thai does improve, but not as much as I want it to bc I have no energy after teaching classes. I am often invited out by coworkers at my school but especially one who is very misleading about what these outings will entail. among other things, this leads to me attending not one, but two funerals for people Iâd never met. struggling with self-image issues bc itâs part of thai culture to comment a lot on appearance and weight.Â
for all that, it was the same thing as japan where I always had more to learn. I loved talking to my students and learning about their lives. the thai approach to timekeeping is quite relaxed, which helped a lot with my anxiety about being late anywhere. I had the absolute time of my life for the internship month followed by a month of vacation in chiang mai, the old northern capital. I wrote articles and took photos for an english language magazine, assisting the thai-english translator in editing her translations. if I could do that kind of work for the rest of my life I would.Â
damn but I want to retire there at least
#yelling into the void#sorry not sorry I was feeling nostalgic#japan#thailand#i'm one of those boring people who yells about being abroad years later
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Abbie Hebein

Abbie Hebein is apexartâs Director of Fellowships and Public Programs. She joined apexart in September 2018 and has since coordinated 16 Fellowships. Prior to apexart, Abbie worked Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum as a program assistant for Curatorial and Education Departments. She participated in Community Word Projectâs Teaching Artist Training and co-curated Remix Rememory in Jamaica, Queens with No Longer Emptyâs Curatorial Lab. In 2014, she received a Fulbright Grant to teach English at a High School in San MartĂn Texmelucan, Puebla, Mexico where she launched an afterschool art, language and storytelling project with her students which culminated in a final exhibition at a historic train station. She holds a BA in Art History from Lewis and Clark College, Portland, OR and is from Boulder, CO.
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Emma Ellis â18 Awarded Fulbright Assistantship in Germany

Emma Ellis '18, an art history major, has been awarded a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship in Hamburg, Germany.
Iâm going #AllinforOberlin today to continue paying it forward for future Obies! http://go.oberlin.edu/allin
At age 13, Ellis began studying German language and culture. After a positive study abroad experience in the country, she began exploring how she might return for longer. When she learned about the Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship, it seemed an ideal opportunity.
âEven though I have never taught a foreign language, the Fulbright teaching assistantship seemed like a perfect way to marry my interest in education with my wish to travel back to Germany,â says Ellis. âI have been working with children of many ages and backgrounds in educational settings since I was 14 years old, and Iâve found using language to make connections incredibly valuable when abroad.â
During her assistantship, Ellis hopes to gain a better understanding of German culture and language. She also hopes to hone her skills as an educator to prepare for a possible career in the field.
âWorking in the German school system will be incredibly eye-opening and professionally enriching. For me, one of the most rewarding experiences is helping others develop skills that make them more emotionally aware or affirm their self-confidence in their own intelligence and abilities. I see instructing German students in English as fulfilling both of these aspects of why I wish to pursue education professionally.â
While at Oberlin, the Boston native was involved in the education department at the Allen Memorial Art Museum, where sheâs worked both as a docent and as assistant to the curator of education. She endeavors to apply her experience translating complex artistic concepts to her work teaching English.
âAs someone interested in art education, I'm used to people finding subject matter confusing or inaccessible, and I try to help them work through this to engage productively with new or strange material. I see language instruction as similar and the [teaching assistantship] as a way to deepen my professional education experience while simultaneously interacting with a country whose culture has been the focus of my academic career for close to a decade.â
Prior to her assistantship, Ellis will intern with the education department of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. She also has been awarded a student travel grant to attend a conference about Ernst Ludwig Kirchner in Davos, Switzerland.
Upon her return to the United States, she is considering attending graduate school to continue her studies in art history, museum education, or general education.
Article by Hillary Hempstead; Photo by Jennifer Manna; Found at:Â https://www.oberlin.edu/news/emma-ellis-18-awarded-fulbright-assistantship-germany
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Pieces by Dr. Vandana Pathak

About the Book
The title is a reflection of the style as well as the substance of the words contained in the book. They are pieces of verse, but also that of the writer's experiences and emotions. They are snapshots in verse, some in English, others in Hindi. Because experiences go beyond language.
The pieces in the book come in various flavours. They are bleak, they are hopeful, they are dark, they are also sublime. The poems vary in tone and texture, but there's no doubt that they all bear the mark of their writer.
Itâs a canvas on which are splattered different colours with no symmetry. An abstract piece, much like life. In a world where we all live our lives in compartments, these pieces will feel like homecoming to many, and a balm to others.
About the Author
Dr. Vandana Pathak identifies herself primarily as a nomad and a logophile. A language trainer and academician by profession, she is an avid reader and a bigger horder. A doctorate in English Literature, she is a Gold Medalist in M.Phil. Her work experience extends from UNICEF projects to working as a trainer for EFL in NGOs to training university students. She is NET and two state SET qualified and in that capacity, has taught Communication Skills to Under-graduate and graduate students. As a recipient of the Fulbright scholarship, Foreign Language Teaching Assistant, she has taught students at the University of Utah, U.S.A while doing her graduate courses. She has also presented and published research papers on a wide spectrum of topics in National and International conferences. Her debut story Untold, published by Immortal Publications won her the Best Debut Story Award and motivated her to write more. This is her first creative project in verse and she looks forward to her next creative stint, especially for her newborn daughter Vaanya Mridul Jatana.
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1. Thank you, thank you, thank you :) It still amazes me that people follow me. And doubly thank you for you posi vibes on my grad school application <3
2. Congratulations on going to Italy as an au pair!! I hope you have a blast (and eat EVERYTHING you see)!Â
3. My Russian is mediocre. I barely use it these days, so Iâm slowly losing it, which is a damn shame; however, I do try to continue to practice by reading or playing vocab apps because I have a feeling it will come back into my life full force as it often does.Â
4. First off, follow your gut. If you want to study abroad in Morocco and you feel like you have a connection-- go! Germany will always be there! In fact, you can apply to be a Fulbright ETA (English Teaching Assistant) in Germany after you graduate college. Basically the US Gov will pay you to teach Conversational English for 10 months in Germany (also the money is good and flights are paid for). They have over 140 positions available and require you to take about 2 years of German in college, so those classes will not go to waste! Also if you mention your arabic experience in your app, I think it will help you since Germany has a growing arabic-speaking population!Â
4.5. If that program doesnât interest you, you could always work at a summer camp in Germany or work as an au pair for a summer or year after you graduate college. OR do it the old fashioned way and work really hard, save money, and spend a couple weeks traveling around the country. Â
5. Also, who says you have to stop studying German in Morocco? You can totally enrol in classes if they are offered in your area orrr get a tutor/language partner orrr you can self study! The possibilities are endless. Therefore, when you return to school, you can keep on with your German studies.Â
6. From my experience, your passions always find a way back to you. So if you are truly passionate about Arabic and/or German, you will find a way to make a home for both of them in your life.Â
It seems like you have an exciting life ahead of you. Good luck!! And let me know if I can help with anything else :)
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Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant Program 2023 Apply Online FLTA USEFP Latest
Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant Program 2023 Apply Online FLTA USEFPÂ Latest
Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant Program 2023 Apply Online FLTA USEFP Latest Positions: === Foreign Language Teaching Assistant (FLTA) Program === College / University Level English Teachers City / Location: Jobs in United States Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant Program 2023 Apply Online Please visit the link given below to Apply Online for Fulbright Foreign LanguageâŚ

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Me: Okay! Final section... please ask me a question.
Chiseob: If we were the power couple of CWHS, what would we do on our first date?
Me: Um... we would break up because you're 16... but we can still be friends.
Chiseob: Omg! Teacher! That is too much. Why?
Me: You are too young for me and I only have eyes for Kim Ungseok Teacher (the 50 year old, super strict head teacher).
Chiseob: Ah. I understand *puts fist out for a sullen fist bump* Let's be ride-or-dies.
#fulbright english teaching assistant#fulbright korea#fulbright eta#english teaching assistant#south korean student#south korea#tesol#tesl
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