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Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs

Latest News & Highlights
>>Second
Group of “Partnerships for Learning Undergraduate Studies” (PLUS)
Students Set to Begin Classes for the Fall at U.S. Universities
100 students from North Africa, the Middle East and South Asia
are now enrolling in American colleges and universities under
the auspices of the Partnerships for Learning Undergraduate Studies
(PLUS) program, in its second year of existence. Learn more about
the PLUS program and other academic exchange programs which are
designed to increase mutual understanding between the people of
the United States and the people of other nations managed by the
Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs at http://exchanges.state.gov/education/p4l/plus/.
Read the full announcement.
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>>Women
from the Middle East Meet with Assistant Secretary of State for
Educational and Cultural Affairs Dina H. Powell
On Thursday, August 25, 2005, Assistant Secretary of State for
Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) Dina H. Powell (pictured
second from right) met with 18 women from the Middle East who
are participating in a 3-week International Visitor Leadership
Program, sponsored by ECA. The groups will travel to several cities
throughout the United States to learn about entrepreneurship and
civil society. For more information, please visit the International
Visitor Leadership Program page at http://exchanges.state.gov/education/ivp/.
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>>Ambassador's Fund for Cultural Preservation Awards for 2005 - Support Cultural Preservation in 76 Countries
The Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State, is
pleased to announce that the 2005 Ambassador's Fund for Cultural
Preservation awards will support 87 cultural preservation projects in 76
countries. Established by Congress in 2001, the Ambassador's Fund for
Cultural Preservation aims to assist less developed countries in preserving
museum collections, ancient and historic sites and traditional forms of
expression.
Read
the full announcement. |
>>The
Exchange Online - Special Edition - "Responding to the Asian
Tsunamis"*
The Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs’ Special Edition
of The Exchange newsletter, “Responding to the Asian
Tsunamis - ECA Exchange Participants, Alumni, Grantee Organizations
and Program Partners Extend Hearts and Helping Hands” is now available
online. Read
the newsletter*. (PDF, 1.3 MG - Requires free
Adobe Acrobat Reader.) |

The Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) fosters mutual
understanding between the United States and other countries through
international educational and training programs. The bureau does so by
promoting personal, professional, and institutional ties between private
citizens and organizations in the United States and abroad, as well as by
presenting U.S. history, society, art and culture in all of its diversity
to overseas audiences.

The Fulbright
Program provides grants for Graduate Students, Scholars and
Professionals, and Teachers and Administrators. This site includes Fulbright
Commissions and other information on the program.
EducationUSA
promotes U.S. higher education abroad, supports overseas advising centers,
collaborates with U.S. educational organizations to strengthen
international exchange, and manages the Gilman
study abroad scholarship program.
The Office of English
Language Programs creates and implements high quality, targeted
English language programs overseas to promote mutual understanding between
the United States and other countries. Staff, including overseas-based Regional
English Language Officers, plan, conduct and support programs
sponsored by American Embassies and Consulates.
Programs for Eurasia and
Southeast Europe include activities involving individual fellowships
or institutional linkages.
Requests for Grant
Proposals announce the latest bureau funding opportunities for
academic, and non-profit institutions seeking exchanges and training
grants.
The Humphrey Fellowships
bring mid-level professionals from developing countries to the United
States for a year of academic study and professional
experiences.
Study of the U.S.
promotes better understanding of the U.S. through Summer Institutes for
foreign university faculty. This site also contains an extensive number of
links to on-line American Studies resources.
The International Visitor
Leadership Program brings participants to the U.S. to meet and confer
with professional counterparts and to experience firsthand the U.S. and
its institutions.
The Office of Citizen
Exchanges develops professional,
cultural and youth programs with nonprofit American institutions, including
voluntary community organizations, professional associations, and universities.
Thematic categories for grants include civil society, NGO development,
civic education, media development, judicial training, intellectual property
rights, and public administration among other themes. The office has three
geographic divisions — Europe/Eurasia;
Near East,
South Asia and Africa; and Western Hemisphere and East Asia — as well
as divisions for youth
and cultural programs, including ECA's CultureConnect web site.
The Alumni Affairs Division is committed to continuing to engage with the alumni of Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) exchange programs in order to increase the mutual understanding between the peoples of the United States and other countries.
International
Cultural Property Protection represents U.S. responsibilities in
protecting the cultural patrimony of other countries.
The Ambassador's
Fund for Cultural Preservation, established by Congress for the fiscal
year 2001, aims to assist less developed countries in preserving their
cultural heritage and to demonstrate U.S. respect for other cultures.
*All newsletters above are PDFs and require the
free Adobe
Acrobat Reader.
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