Learning by living abroad

Living with no running water and limited electricity, Orit
Stieglitz spent a year in southern Israel studying the lives of
Bedouin women, Muslims who once wandered the Middle East and are
now transitioning from a nomadic lifestyle to one that is more
urban and stationary.

Stieglitz lived in a village spending her time interviewing and
observing the interactions of Bedouin women and their new life,
which combines modern appliances with traditional household
tasks.

The doctoral candidate is doing dissertation fieldwork in urban
planning and development and was one of the 12 Fulbright Institute
of International Education fellows from UCLA doing research abroad
during the 2004-2005 academic year.

The Fulbright IIE Scholarship, commonly known as the Fulbright
Scholarship, provides monetary grants for more than 1,200 U.S.
students to go abroad each year to do research. The program places
students in more than 140 countries, according to its Web site.

In addition to conducting research, the fellows also act as
cultural ambassadors from the U.S. who promote understanding and
acceptance, said Cherie Francis, director of graduate outreach,
diversity and fellowships for Fulbright.

“A main focus of the (Fulbright IIE) program is culture
ambassadorship ““ how well students can represent the U.S., in
addition to research,” she said.

Fulbright IIE fellows must be U.S. citizens with at least a
bachelor’s degree, but they cannot have a doctoral
degree.

Preference for grants is given to students who have studied
primarily in U.S. institutions. Also, though fellows are encouraged
to travel to a country they are familiar with, it is preferable
that they have not lived in that country for more than six
months.

The Fulbright Scholarship, which is funded by the U.S.
Department of State, covers transportation and living costs, a
stipend, money for research and medical insurance. The
participating countries can provide additional financial
assistance, and the grants are different for each fellow, according
to the Fulbright Web site.

In Stieglitz’s case, Fulbright provided transportation
costs for her family in the grant so her family was able to travel
to Israel as well.

In each participating country, there are Fulbright organizations
that assist the fellows and provide social opportunities for them
to bond.

“(The fellows) felt like a family with support,”
Stieglitz said, and added that she interacted with other Fulbright
fellows, though she was mostly on her own in the village.

Fulbright also has other programs for graduate students. The
Fulbright-Hays ““ Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad
program, run by the Department of Education, is awarded to
doctorate students studying modern foreign languages and area
studies not including Western Europe. Applicants should already
have expertise in the language and area they are planning to visit,
according to its Web site.

For this academic year, 13 UCLA graduate students are
participating in the IIE program, while another six are in the
Fulbright-Hays program, Francis said.

Both programs accept applications once per year. Applications
for Fulbright IIE are due in late October and the deadline for
Fulbright-Hays is mid-November.

Laurie Duthie, a doctoral candidate in anthropology, had lived
in China for ten years before going back as part of the
Fulbright-Hays program in 2006.

She went to China in 2006 to study Chinese executives working in
multinational companies for her social anthropology
dissertation.

In her eight months in China, she worked on projects for the
companies whose executives she was studying, attended company
meetings, helped to plan a Chinese New Year banquet, and
participated in other social and professional activities with the
companies.

In both programs, the fellows must be affiliated with a
university in the host country, which assists the researcher.

“Affiliations are very important to make sure what you are
doing is appropriate and comply with the law there.” Duthie
said.

However, with the Hays program there is a greater focus on
completing research and the fellows do not conduct as many social
programs with other fellows, Duthie said.

Fulbright IIE fellows should also be flexible in their research
plans, said Stieglitz, who had to change her plans when she found
that her proposal could not work because of time constraints.

The application process for the Fulbright IIE takes four to six
months, Francis said.

While there are general fellowship information sessions
throughout the year that include the Fulbright IIE, there are also
information sessions for just the Fulbright IIE in the spring and
summer in the graduate student resources center, Francis added.

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