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Current U.S. Student

United States citizens who are currently enrolled in undergraduate or graduate degree programs are eligible to apply.If you are currently enrolled in an undergraduate or graduate program at a U.S. college or university, you will apply through that institution, even if you are not currently a resident there. Find the Fulbright Program Adviser on your campus.

U.S. Citizen but not a Student

If you are a U.S. citizen, will hold a bachelor’s degree by the award start date, and do not have a Ph.D. degree, then you are eligible to apply. Non-enrolled applicants should have relatively limited professional experience in the fields (typically 7 years or less) in which they are applying. Candidates with more experience should consider applying for the Fulbright Scholar Program.

The Getting Started page will provide information on eligibility and next steps.

Artist

The Fulbright U.S. Student Program welcomes applications in the creative and performing arts. Arts candidates for the U.S. Student Program should have relatively limited professional experience in the fields (typically 7 years or less) in which they are applying. Artists with more experience should consider applying for the Fulbright Scholar Program.

Creative & Performing Arts projects fall under the Study/Research grant category and are available in all countries where Study/Research grants are offered.

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U.S. Professor/Administrator

If you are a U.S. citizen and a professor or administrator at a U.S. institution and are interested in applying for a Fulbright Scholar Award, you will need to apply through fulbrightscholars.org.

To support your students in applying for a U.S. Student Program award, please connect with the Fulbright Program Adviser at your institution.

Non U.S. Citizens

If you are a non-U.S. citizen interested in applying for a Fulbright Award to the United States, you will need to apply through the Fulbright Commission or U.S. Embassy in your home country. Find out more information on the Fulbright Visiting Scholar Program or Fulbright Foreign Student Program.

Four UCR students win 2019-20 Fulbright awards

Sunday April 30, 2000

Category: Campus News

Four students of the University of California, Riverside, have received Fulbright awards to conduct research abroad during the 2019-20 academic year. The Fulbright U.S. Student Program is the leading international education exchange program sponsored by the U.S. government and is designed to increase mutual understanding between the people of the United States and people of other countries. Recipients of Fulbright awards are selected on the basis of academic and professional achievement as well as record of service and demonstrated leadership in their respective fields. The program, which operates in more than 140 countries worldwide, currently awards approximately 2,000 grants annually in all fields of study. From UCR, the two doctoral students, one graduating senior, and one recent alumna who received awards this year as part of the Fulbright U.S. Student Program are: Sophea Seng: Seng, a doctoral student in UCR’s anthropology department, will spend her Fulbright term in Italy. Once there, she’ll research and conduct interviews with members of a community of Cambodian refugees who, fleeing genocide, resettled in the northern Italian region of Lombardy in the 1970s, aided mainly by Catholic charitable organizations. Jesse Freedman: Freedman, a doctoral student in UCR’s ethnomusicology program, will pursue a Fulbright project in Chile. Based in the capital city of Santiago, he'll examine protest music among Chileans who immigrated to East Germany to escape the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet between the 1970s and ’90s and have since resettled in Chile. Cebrina Nolan: Nolan, who will graduate this spring with a bachelor’s degree in entomology, previously served as one of the lead investigators of the Emerald Jewel Wasp Project in the lab of entomology and neuroscience professor Michael Adams. Her Fulbright will see her travel to Brisbane, Australia, to investigate the structure and function of omega-agatoxins from American funnel-web spider venom. Russel Altamirano: Altamirano, a UCR alumna, graduated in 2016 with a bachelor’s degree in art history. Her receipt of a Fulbright Community-Based Combined Grant will allow her to pursue a community-based internship or service project in Vienna while also working as an English teaching assistant and taking university courses on a part-time basis. During their grant periods, Fulbrighters meet, work, live with, and learn from the people of the host country, sharing daily experiences. The program facilitates cultural exchange through direct interaction on an individual basis in the classroom, field, home, and in routine tasks, allowing the grantee to gain an appreciation of others’ viewpoints and beliefs, the way they do things, and the way they think.