Maybe you are a junior faculty member, with only a few years’ experience, and keen to develop your career through networking and international exchanges. Or maybe you are in mid-career, or even approaching retirement, and want to share some of your expertise with students and professionals in another country. Perhaps you want to learn new techniques from colleagues in another country, discover new research directions, gain new teaching insights, understand your discipline in a global context, establish long-term professional relationships, or allow your family to experience a different culture. No matter what stage you are at in your career, if you value professional and personal development, you should consider applying for a Fulbright grant.1 Your College will love you for it too! (Forbes Magazine, in its ranking of colleges, “measures academic excellence in part by how many faculty members have won prestigious awards like Nobel prizes or...
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November 2012
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November 01 2012
Step up to a Fulbright
Geoff Dougherty
Geoff Dougherty
California State University
, Channel Islands
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Am. J. Phys. 80, 947–948 (2012)
Article history
Received:
July 10 2012
Accepted:
July 19 2012
Citation
Geoff Dougherty; Step up to a Fulbright. Am. J. Phys. 1 November 2012; 80 (11): 947–948. https://doi.org/10.1119/1.4742183
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