Category Archives: Fulbright

Four Fulbright Chicago board members attended Fulbright National Conference in D.C.

Ana Gil-García, Jason Romano, Hariet Mayor Fulbright, Elio Leturia and Patti Powell

Ana Gil-García, Jason Romano, Harriet Mayor Fulbright, Elio Leturia and Patti Powell

“FULBRIGHT IN ACTION” was the theme of the 36th Fulbright Association Annual Conference that took place at the L’Enfant Plaza Hotel in Washington D.C. October 3-6, 2013. Our Chicago Fulbright Chapter was well represented at this international event that comprised 27 panels and presentations. 250 participants from 35 countries attended the conference.

Not only did we have four Fulbright Chicago board members (Jason Romano, Patti Powell, Ana Gil García and Elio Leturia) at the conference but two of those participated as panelists. Ana Gil-García presented on the panel, “Walking the talk: Achieving diversity in the Fulbright Program” and Elio Leturia was on the “The Missing Voice on Gender Equality: Time for Men to Speak Up” luncheon panel which was presented by Sheryl Sandberg via a video introduction. Patti Powell presented “Charting the Hero’s Journey” as part of the opening Poster Session.

Judy Alsobrooks Meredith and Ana Gil-García presented in the Diversity panel

Judy Alsobrooks Meredith and Ana Gil-García presented in the Diversity panel

In the Diversity panel session, Gil-García discussed, along with Judy Meredith and David Smith, ways to increase diverse and minority applicants in the Fulbright Program, that has been decreasing in recent years. Her presentation encompassed her experiences as a Venezuelan woman, turned into a minority, a Latina, a Hispanic, a woman of color, a Venezuelan-American, a South-American, and other labels that she has received over her more than 25 years in the U.S.

Clymer, Fukushima, Leturia and Modi in the Gender Equality panel

Clymer, Fukushima, Leturia and Modi in the Gender Equality panel

Sandberg delivers the Gender Equality panel presentation

Sandberg introduced the Gender Equality panel

Leturia, along with Charles Clymer, Glen Fukushima and Kunal Modi shared their experiences and points of view about ways to achieve gender equality from the male perspective. As Sheryl Sanberg said in her presentation, “We’re not going to get to a more equal world if this is a conversation about women, amongst women. This isn’t about women. This is about all of us. And it will take men’s voices, along with women to make a difference… That’s why I’m so excited the Fulbright Association has worked on pulling together this panel. And I’m so excited to have this conversation about gender equality led by, and fully participated in by men.”

Though much of DC was shut down we were able to have a beautiful reception at the Diplomatic Rooms of the U.S. State Department, where Harriet Mayor Fulbright, Tom Healy, Chairman of the Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board, and John Vogel, President of the Fulbright Association, among others, were present.

Mary Ellen Schmider, Vive President of the Fulbright Association, presented in the panel, "Fulbrighters in Action Volunteering Internationally: Iran & the Balkans".

Mary Ellen Schmider, Vice President of the Fulbright Association, presented in the panel, “Fulbrighters in Action Volunteering Internationally: Iran & the Balkans”.

Another highlight of the conference was the screening of the documentary “Zuluhoops” by Columbia College professor Kristin Pichaske, who shot the footage during her Fulbright in South Africa. The documentary depicted the story of Ken Mukai, a Fulbrighter from Los Angeles, who used basketball to teach and connect with his students in a remote town of the country.

On the last day of the conference another film, “Death Metal Angola,” which is making the rounds of various film festivals was shown. This movie was the closing activity of three days full of lively discussion both in sessions and on panels everyday.

Elio Leturia, Judy Meredith, James Meredith, Ana GIl-García and Patti Powell

Elio Leturia, Judy Meredith, James Meredith, Ana GIl-García and Patti Powell. James Meredith, a civil rights movement icon, presented in the Diversity luncheon.

Ana Gil García gets the “Latinas en Acción” award

Ana Gil-García receiving the María Mangual Award.

Ana Gil-García receiving the María Mangual Award from “Mujeres Latinas en Acción.”

ON OCTOBER 2, 2013, our Fulbright Chicago chapter board member and Director of Membership Dr. Ana Gil-García, was presented with the 2013 María Mangual Award for her continued work to empower, educate and mentor Latinas.

Mujeres Latinas en Acción offers this award every year. This organization, a non-for-profit born in 1970, is considered the longest-standing Latina organization in the United States, serving to empower Latinas through services that reflect their values and culture.

The ceremony took place at the Double Tree by Hilton Hotel in the Magnificent Mile.

Dr. Ana Gil-García is a Fulbright Chicago chapter past president (2006-2008,) a three-time Fulbright scholar (Venezuela, Middle East and Armenia) and a professor of Educational Leadership at Northeastern Illinois University.

She was named as one of the 2010 “Top Ten Chicago Latinos” and one of the “100 Most Influential Hispanics in the USA” by  Hispanic Business magazine. She founded The Book Partnership, an ongoing international community service project of the Chicago Fulbright Association to bring literacy to Panama, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Egypt, Moldova, Ghana, Botswana and Ecuador in order to serve socioeconomically deprived schools in those regions.

Fulbright Chicago board member opens a solo photographic exhibit

Regina Mamou_photo

THIS FRIDAY OCTOBER 11, 2013, Fulbright Association Chicago Chapter board member Regina Mamou will be opening her photographic solo exhibit, Unfortunately, It Was Paradise.

The opening reception will take place from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the City Gallery in the Historic Water Tower, 806 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60611.

This solo exhibition, curated by DCASE showcases the latest photo work from Mamou. According to Karsten Lund, Curatorial Assistant at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago,“The series resembles a straightforward historical study at first, but it whittles away at its own self-assurances, giving way to a more open-ended investigation, an inquisitive tangle of ruminative questions. The photographs employ observational methods and an unembellished style like we’ve come to associate with documentary photography, but their primary aim isn’t to convey historical information. If it’s history we’re after, the past appears unexplained, unannotated, in need of deciphering.”

Lund continues, “Mamou approaches her subjects obliquely, interested more in the ambiguous overlay of past and present in these places, the aesthetics of the communities coded into the landscape, and the ways visual evidence requires interpretation. Her photographs are amalgams of what took place at these sites in the mid-19th century, what she found when she visited recently, and her subjective choices of what to record.”

Unfortunately, It Was Paradise will remain open until January 19, 2014.

Regina Mamou_mugRegina Mamou is a Chicago-based visual artist working at the intersection of photography, installation, and research practices. In 2009 she received a 15-month Fulbright Fellowship to Jordan to explore navigational methods and memory in Amman. She has exhibited her work nationally and internationally. Selected exhibitions include Makan Art Space in Amman, Jordan (2010); Action Field Kodra’s 11th Exhibition of  Contemporary Art in Thessaloniki, Greece (2011); and The Chicago Project online at Catherine Edelman Gallery (2012). Mamou holds an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design.

Please visit reginamamou.com for more information.

Regina Mamou is a 2012 Fulbright U.S. Student Program Alumni Ambassador and currently the Director of Academic Relations on the board of the Chicago Chapter of the Fulbright Association

Opening of “Victoria,” a success

The photo exhibit "Victoria" opened at the UNAM on September 26, 2013

The photo exhibit “Victoria” opened at the UNAM on September 26, 2013

By José Rodríguez—THE CHICAGO CHAPTER OF THE Fulbright Association joined other sponsoring organizations during the opening reception of the photo exhibit “Victoria,” that took place at the UNAM Chicago (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México in Chicago) located on 350 W Erie St. #300, Chicago.

The exhibit captures the struggle between life and death through the life of a dancer, with a succession of photographs, poetry and prose of the Venezuelan model and professional ballet dancer Victoria Vargas.

Ron Harvey, Fulbright Chicago Chapter president, dancer Victoria Vargas and photographer Alberto March

Ron Harvey, Fulbright Chicago Chapter president, dancer Victoria Vargas and photographer Alberto March

During her opening words, Ms. Vargas gave an emotional speech on how a connection was established between her life, her triumph against death, her art and the photographers (Alberto March) vision of the paradoxical struggles of an artist through his camera.  “It is not my time to go yet, I will live until I am 127!” Ms. Vargas said.

Dance presentation by Elements Contemporary Ballet

Dance presentation by Elements Contemporary Ballet

Throughout the event, Fulbright Chicago Chapter president Ronald Harvey and other Fulbright Alumni answered questions and distributed information about the association and the Fulbright Program. Elements Contemporary Ballet performed an excerpt of their work-in-progress piece “The Sun King”.

This photo exhibit will remain open until November 26, 2013.

Guests watching the photo exhibit

Guests watching the photo exhibit

Guests who attended the opening of "Victoria"

Guests who attended the opening of “Victoria”

Victoria y Alberto with Javier Laguna,  UNAM Chicago Director and Arturo Castro, Cultural, Business Development, and Special Project Coordinator of UNAM Chicago.

Victoria Vargas and Alberto March with Javier Laguna, UNAM Chicago Director, and Arturo Castro, Cultural, Business Development, and Special Project Coordinator of UNAM Chicago.

María Carbonell, curator of the photo exhibit "Victoria"

María Carbonell, curator of the photo exhibit “Victoria”

Dance presentation by Elements Contemporary Ballet

Dance presentation by Elements Contemporary Ballet

Photos by José Rodríguez and Ronald Harvey

Welcome to Chicago; welcome to Pilsen. RSVP now!

Colorful Pilsen mural. Photo by Adam Jones

Colorful Pilsen mural. Photo by Adam Jones

Pilsen, postcard before 1914.

Pilsen, postcard before 1914.

THE CHICAGO CHAPTER OF THE FULBRIGHT ASSOCIATION and the Institute of International Education (IIE) invite you, your family, colleagues, and friends to attend the 2013 Fall Welcome.

Let us welcome you with an informal lunch at Simone’s, a unique local bar, in Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood, located on Chicago’s near south side. Then, join us for a walking tour of the Pilsen Historic District. The neighborhood was historically the first-stop for American immigrants from Bohemia (Czech Republic) and more currently from Mexico.  We hope to see you there!

WHEN Saturday, September 28th, 2013

TIME 11 am.-2 pm.

WHERE Lunch at 11 am. at Simone’s, 960 W 18th Street, Chicago, IL 60608.  Tour leaves from Simone’s at 1 pm.

COST Students and Scholars, free; Guests of Visiting Students and Scholars, Fulbright Association members and guests, $15 (includes lunch and tour)

HOW TO GET THERE CTA Blue line to the UIC-Halsted station. CTA Bus Routes 8 or 18 have a stop 2 blocks from Simone’s at the Halsted and 18th St. intersection. Also CTA Pink Line, get off at 18th St. and walk to Simone’s (a mile going west.)

PARKING Street parking on 18th Street or Halsted Street walking distance of Simone’s.

 RSVPs are required. Please RSVP (by Tuesday, September 24th, 2013) using the online form HERE

After you RSVP, please pay online to reserve your spot: http://tinyurl.com/2013FallWelcomeFulbright

For questions or concerns, please email fulbrightchicago@gmail.com.

A date with Victoria, a photo and dance exhibit

Victoria-SavetheDate

THE CHICAGO CHAPTER of the Fulbright Association is very pleased to invite the Fulbright community to the opening reception of “Victoria,” a Photographic Art Exhibition that presents work by Venezuelan artist Alberto March.

The photographic exhibit documents the life and trajectory of Venezuela-born Chicago-based dancer Victoria Vargas.

“Victoria” will open on September 26, 2013 at the Cultural Space gallery of the UNAM Chicago (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México in Chicago) located on 350 W Erie St. #300, Chicago, IL 60654 at 6 p.m.

This reception will also feature the participation of the dance group Elements Contemporary Ballet, that will perform an excerpt of their work-in-progress, “The Sun King.”

marchsmAlberto March is an award-winning photographer/graphic designer living and working in Barcelona, Spain. Born in Venezuela in1960, March received his B.A., in Graphic Design in 1985 and his B.A. in Advertising and Marketing in 2000. He has participated in-group exhibitions from 1980 to 1990 in Venezuela, Argentina, Peru, Brazil, Colombia and Central America. He has recently presented a 14-piece exhibit titled “Giants of Chicago” at ArtPrize, Grand Rapids, Michigan, Consulate of Venezuela and UNAM University of Mexico in Chicago, CuCut Gallery, Barcelona, Spain, and Thompson Center in Chicago.

victoriaVictoria Vargas has more than 20 years of experience as a professional dancer. She studied ballet at the School of Fine Arts of Venezuela and has performed with the National Ballet of Venezuela, Contemporary Ballet of Caracas, the San Francisco Opera House, Dallas Opera House and the Lyric Opera of Chicago. Victoria has taught dance in Chicago for the last 12 years. Currently, she is a a faculty member of the Joffrey Ballet. She was a founding member of Luna Negra Dance Theater Company and its outreach program, UNO, earning her a nomination by the City of Chicago as one of the most prominent Latinos in the expansion of the Educational Programs for Minority Communities. The National Ballet of Panama has invited Victoria to stage her most popular piece, The Dreams of Reason, an exciting theatrical ballet that explores the darker ideas of the Spanish painter Francisco de Goya.

This photo exhibit will remain open until November 26, 2013.

Second book drive of the summer

Jeff Shaw, North Shore Country Day School teacher enters the Ethiopian center with his donation.

Jeff Shaw, North Shore Country Day School teacher, enters the Ethiopian center with his books donation.

TWELVE BOXES OF BOOKS were collected during the second summer book drive organized by the Chicago Chapter of the Fulbright Association that took place at the Ethiopian Association Community of Chicago on Saturday August 17, 2013 from 9 a.m until 2 p.m.

Chicago Chapter board member Kari Burnett, and Elizabeth Pereira-Maguet, a friend of Fulbright, spent five hours working on this book drive, which is the second of this summer. Board member Ana Gil-García who is our membership director, is also coordinating this valuable effort, “The Fulbright Book Partnership.”

Kari Burnett and Elizabeth Pereira-Maguet at the Ethiopian Community Association of Chicago during the book drive.

Friend of Fulbright Elizabeth Pereira-Maguet and board member Kari Burnett at the Ethiopian Community Association of Chicago during the book drive.

Donated books at the book drive

Donated books at the book drive

This ongoing initiative’s goal is to collect 5,000 books this year. As reported before, the Chicago Chapter of the Fulbright Association has donated books and educational materials by partnering with the Fulbright offices and associations in different countries. Books have been donated to Panama, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Egypt, Moldova, Ghana and Botswana.

Ethiopia and Macedonia are the countries that we will be partnering with in order to donate educational materials next.

Jeff Shaw, a Fulbrighter who spent one year teaching in Manchester, UK in 2000-2001, donated books in this drive. He is a teacher at North Shore Country Day School in Wilmette. “I had a great experience teaching in England,” he said. Currently he teaches library and technology skills.

Board members Kari Burnett and Ana Gil-García talking to Fulbrighter Jeff Shaw, who donated books on this drive.

Board members Kari Burnett and Ana Gil-García talking to Fulbrighter Jeff Shaw, who donated books at this drive.

Book drive for Ethiopia and Macedonia

books

DO YOU HAVE GENTLY USED BOOKS that your library is ready to discard? Would you like to see those books in the hands of students from Ethiopia and Macedonia who do not have books at their school?

The Chicago Chapter of the Fulbright Association will be holding a book drive! And we need your help.

WHEN  Saturday, August 17, 2013

TIME from 9:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.

WHERE  Ethiopian Community Association of Chicago, 1730 West Greenleaf Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60626, Phone: 773-508-0303

People from our team will be there to assist you with your box(es) of books and to give a big “Thank you!”

This book drive is part of our chapter’s ongoing world initiative “The Fulbright Book Partnership” Program. So far, we have donated over 1,000 books to schools and universities in Panama, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Egypt, Ghana, Moldova and Botswana.

The Millennial Trains Project and Design+Us

Design + US is Meghan Lazier's project proposal for the inaugural Millennial Trains Project.  She will use design thinking workshops to help local leaders solve problems while learning a new skill set of better brainstorming, designing with empathy and putting rapid prototyping into action if she raises $5,000 by June 30th.

Design + US is Meghan Lazier’s project proposal for the inaugural Millennial Trains Project. She will use design thinking workshops to help local leaders solve problems while learning a new skill set of better brainstorming, designing with empathy and putting rapid prototyping into action if she raises $5,000 by June 30th.

THOUGH FULBRIGHT SCHOLARS come from many different backgrounds and academic disciplines, one of the common takeaways from the experience is that the year is a time for both reflection and action. It’s a time to observe and to launch new ideas.

So, it is no surprise that during Patrick Dowd’s year as a Fulbright in India, where he helped co-lead a trip for young activists by train throughout India, has led to the launch of his latest venture, the Millennial Trains Project.

The Millennial Trains Project is a non-profit organization that empowers civic-minded Millennials here in the US to explore the country by train.  During the ten-day, cross-country journey, which stops in Chicago, Millennial participants will lead seminars and projects with local community members that benefit and inspire others.

Chicagoan and former Fulbright Scholar Meghan Lazier (Hong Kong 2007-2008) is vying for a place on the train. But in order to participate in the project, each participant must crowdfund $5,000 by raising money to support a project that create community impact and can be accomplished during the ten-day journey.

As a soon-to-be MFA student in design, Meghan Lazier knew that she wanted her project to help teach community leaders the transformative power of design thinking.  Design thinking is an approach that uses empathy, better brainstorming and rapid prototyping to come up with better ideas and solutions when trying to solve a problem.

As Lazier says, “By using design thinking – along with a mix of creativity and a dash of innovation – today’s leading companies have generated millions of dollars by thinking about their users and designing creative solutions. Simply put, companies that use design thinking win.  They win our trust, loyalty and ultimately, our dollars. When communities learn the power of design thinking – they’ll win too.  They’ll win by helping save lives by re-thinking emergency preparedness strategies, figure out how to stretch a small budget to house 50 more people each night at a homeless shelter or how to stop unwanted graffiti on a historical building.  No matter what problem a community is looking to face, using design thinking will generate more win-win solutions than ever before.  That’s because, design thinking beyond our comfort zones and knee-jerk reactions to problems.”

Lazier says that her experience as an Fulbright English Teaching Assistant in Hong Kong and the opportunity she had to spend six weeks learning about design thinking from the co-founder of Stanford’s d.school make her well trained in how to deliver an impactful presentation and meaningful results.

To help Patrick and Meghan succeed in making the Millennial Trains Project possible, learn more and donate by July 15th!

J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board met in Chicago

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel welcoming the audience to the MOOCs panel discussion

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel welcoming the audience to the MOOCs panel discussion

“WELCOME TO THE MOST AMERICAN of the American cities,” said Chicago mayor Rahm Emanuel at the MOOCs panel discussion event that took place at the University of Chicago Hyde Park campus on Monday May 7, 2013.

The J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board (FFSB) is the organism that oversees all the Fulbright programs in the world, and meets four times a year. For the first time, this board met in Chicago, May 6-8.

In order to reach out to the Fulbright community, the Department of State worked closely with the Chicago Chapter of the Fulbright Association to organize a series of activities while the Fulbright Board was in town. Several events took place at the Quadrangle Club of the University of Chicago.

Students, alumni and guests at the information fair prior to the panel discussion

Students, alumni and guests at the information fair prior to the panel discussion

The first event was an information fair that showcased exchange and career opportunities with the United States Department of State. Representatives from programs like the Fulbright-Hays Scholarship, Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship, Critical Language Scholarship, Institute of International Education and U.S. State Department Diplomat in Residence, among others, were present at the fair.

Left to right, panelists

Left to right, panelists Shai Reshief, Katie Day Good, Henry Bienen, Clay Pell and moderator Laura S. Trombley

The second event was a panel discussion, “Fulbright 2.0—E-Learning, MOOCs, OERs, and the Future: What does New Technology Mean for Global Education,” that took place right after the fair. “We are here to see how technology is changing world education,” Tom Healy, President of the Fulbright Foreign Board said when addressing a packed room of participants.

Participants packed the room at the panel discussion

Participants packed the room at the panel discussion

The objective of the panel was to explore and discuss the evolving role of e-learning technologies around the world and the potential applications within the Fulbright Program. Among the panelists there were Clay Pell from the U.S. Department of Education, Henry Bienen, President Emeritus of Northwestern University, Katie Day Good, Fulbright alumna-MTVU to Mexico, and Shai Reshief, President of the University of the People. The panel was moderated by Laura S. Trombley, President of Pitzer College and member of the Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board.

Tom Healy, President of the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board at the reception after the panel discussion.

Tom Healy, President of the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board at the reception after the panel discussion.

Right after the panel discussion, a reception celebrating the “extraordinary history of the Fulbright Program in Chicago” was offered.

"I'm an octogenarian," joked Hanna, President Emeritus of the University of Chicago

“I’m an octogenarian,” joked Hanna Holborn Gray, special guest and President Emeritus of the University of Chicago

The special guest at the reception was Hanna Holborn Gray, President Emeritus of the University of Chicago and a 1950-51 Fulbright Scholar to the UK.

President of Northeastern Illinois University and Chicago Chapter of the Fulbright Association board member Ana Gil-García

Sharon K. Hahs, President of Northeastern Illinois University, and Chicago Chapter of the Fulbright Association board member Ana Gil-García, talk to a guest

On Tuesday May 7, the Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board visited Northeastern Illinois University, invited by its President Sharon K. Hahs, and Ana Gil-García, board member of the Chicago chapter of the Fulbright Association and professor at the same university.

Executive DIrector of the Fulbright Association Stephen Reilly and his wife talk with Betty Castor, member of the FFSB

Executive DIrector of the Fulbright Association Stephen Reilly and his wife talk with Betty Castor, member of the FFSB

During the FFSB board visit to Chicago, Stephen Reilly, Executive Director of the Fulbright Association in D.C. had the opportunity to meet with all the board members and discuss his vision on how to move the national Fulbright Association forward by creating new programming and increasing membership.

Erik Blome, Chicago Chapter of the Fulbright Association board member asks a question during the Q/A portion of the panel discussion

Erik Blome, Chicago Chapter of the Fulbright Association board member asks a question during the Q/A portion of the panel discussion