Middlebury Internal Deadlines for Watson and Fulbright on 9/12 and 9/13

Internal deadlines are coming up! Details below:

Watson Fellowship: Middlebury’s application deadline is noon on Tuesday, 9/12/17. All students registered in the online Watson application system received an updated email with updated instructions on 9/8. Because of issues generated pdfs from the online system, the fellowships office will do that for you. However, you must email fellowships@middlebury.edu before noon on Tuesday, September 12, to confirm that your application is ready for download. You also need to complete the online fellowships waiver form, if you haven’t already. If you decide not to apply, please email us also to let us know we can withdraw you from the Watson application system.

Fulbright GrantsMiddlebury’s application deadline is noon on Wednesday, 9/13/17. You must SUBMIT your application through Embark by this date to apply through Middlebury. You also need to complete the online fellowships waiver form, if you haven’t already; alumni will need to use the word doc format of this form on the go/fellowships website. Here are some answers to common questions I am asked around this time:

  1. Alumni applicants can choose to apply through Middlebury or At Large. Middlebury seniors MUST apply through Middlebury. Anyone applying through Middlebury must adhere to our internal deadlines.
  2. When you submit your application in Embark and you are applying through Middlebury, your submitted application goes to the fellowships office. We will submit your application to Fulbright after adding material from the campus committee interview. Alumni, if you apply At Large, your submitted application goes directly to Fulbright.
  3. You will get an interview sign up sheet on Wednesday afternoon. You must sign up for an interview time by Friday 9/15 at noon. These interviews are brief and you will be given more information about it via email.
  4. You should submit a complete and polished application. If there are issues that need to be addressed in the essays and these are noted through the campus interview, we will return the application to you to make those changes.
  5. If letters of recommendation or language evaluations are late, these will be added to your application when they are submitted by the recommender/evaluator. Just let us know if this is the case. If your letter of affiliation is late, please be in touch with us about this, so you can add it when it arrives. Materials not submitted by 9/13 will likely not be available for the campus committee review; this does happen occasionally. All applications must be complete, however, by Oct 4.
  6. We endeavor to submit applications a day ahead of the national deadline.
  7. If you decide not to apply, we appreciate an email confirming that. Otherwise, we assume if you did not submit an application on 9/13 by noon that you are not proceeding with your Fulbright application.
  8. Everyone planning on applying through Middlebury should have an active application in the Embark online system by this date. Access to that is available through https://us.fulbrightonline.org 

 

Upcoming Fulbright Deadlines and Application Tips

For those thinking about applying for a Fulbright grant in the fall, just a reminder about deadlines and things to be thinking about. Please read carefully as I attempt to address below some common questions I get from applicants and issues I see in reviewing materials.

Upcoming Deadlines:
August 15 “Intend to Apply” Deadline: Send a copy of your Fulbright application materials (pdf or .doc for essays) in its current state in Embark to fellowships@middlebury.edu for me to review.  You can “print to pdf” to make a copy of the application. Essays you can send as word documents labeled with your last name and the whether it’s the SGP (statement of grant purpose) or personal statement if these are separate documents. Format according to the Fulbright specifications. I realize this will not be a polished application. Recommendations, transcripts, affiliation letters, etc. are not needed at this time (but if you have an affiliation lined up, include a copy of that). I will review your materials, send comments as needed, and you can continue working on your application. We will order transcripts (no charge) for those who have an active application in the Fulbright Embark online system only and send requested materials by August 15. If you do not send me your materials by Aug 15, you can still apply! You will simply need to take care of securing and uploading your transcript (see Transcript note below) yourself. I also may be less able to provide you with substantive comments on your essays depending on when you send me materials to review. If you discontinue your application after this point, that is ok–just let us know as soon as you determine that. See go.middlebury.edu/fulbright for complete application instructions.

September 13 at noon (Wed): This is a hard deadline! Submit your complete and polished Fulbright application in the Embark online system. All components of your application should be done at this point. Essays must be polished with no grammatical or spelling errors. Revisions after this date only happen when the campus committee review process notes issues that require your attention. If you have late recommendations or problems with an affiliation letter, please still submit your application by the deadline and be in touch with fellowships about the issue. Note: by submitting the application, you are sending it to the fellowships office at this point, not to Fulbright. We will take care of submission to Fulbright in October.

Late September: You have a brief interview with a campus committee about your application. You will receive a sign-up sheet for this after you submit on Sept 13. This interview is required for us to evaluate your strength as a candidate and we share that evaluation with Fulbright. Interviews are conducted in person, by Skype and by phone if needed.

October 6: I will send your application to Fulbright before the national deadline on October 6.
A few important notes–please review carefully:

Transcripts: Fulbright will accept unofficial transcripts as well as official ones at this stage. We prefer official transcripts because the formatting is concise. However, unofficial transcripts are acceptable. Just make sure that they are concise, in chronological order, and contain the necessary elements on an official transcript (courses, grades by semester, overall GPA, major, etc.). If you are a transfer student or have grades from other schools you would like represented, you will need to obtain a transcript from those previous institutions and upload. We will send pdf copies of the Middlebury transcript to you in time to upload for the internal deadline below. The goal here is to provide a complete and easily readable transcript for your readers.

Affiliation Letters: The affiliation letter should come from the institution/individual in the host country with whom you are proposing to work. It should be written in or translated to English, printed on official letterhead and should be signed by the author. If an English translation is provided, both the original letter and the translation should be uploaded. Letters should include the author’s position title, indicate the author’s willingness to work with you on the intended project, should speak to the feasibility and validity and merits of what is being proposed. The letter should also indicate any additional resources or contacts that the adviser can provide to support the work. Letters will vary, but the strongest letters will address these points noted.

Recommendations and language evaluations: It’s courteous to give at least three-weeks notice for these. You can certainly schedule the language evaluation to take place when you return to campus, but the evaluation needs to be submitted by the Sept 13 noon deadline. If you have the same person complete both a recommendation and language evaluation, please use two separate email addresses to register them. You want to choose recommenders who know you and are best suited to comment on your proposed research or ETA grant application.

Statement of Grant Purpose (SGP): Before you submit your drafts to me, take the time to do a few basic checks on your own.

  • Have you reviewed carefully any special application notes for your country? A few require specific statement formats, additional pieces of information, translations of proposal, etc.  If there are special requirements, make sure you’ve attended to those.
  • Do you cover the needed components? For research proposals, typically this would be: what you want to do and where; why it’s important; how you will do it (specific research activities, methods, general sense of timeframe); how your affiliation will be of help to you, how you are prepared to undertake this work successfully; what your proposed community engagement is; and how this research project will contribute to your broader professional objectives. These proposals should be clear, provide appropriate context and detail, and be relatively jargon-free. Remember, your readers may not be experts in your field, so write to a well-educated audience outside of your field—and that means, you many need to explain a few things.
  • For the ETA, this would be: why do you want to teach English in this country? What relevant experience do you bring to this position? What ideas do you have for your classroom? What is your supplementary project (if required)? What is your proposed community engagement? How this research project will contribute to your broader professional objectives? Definitely pay attention to your motivation for teaching in a particular country—this often gets overlooked.

SGP tone should be professional, clear and direct. You have an opportunity to share more of your personal voice and experiences in the personal statement. But this is a grant proposal, and your job here is to explain why this project in this place and why you are well-suited to undertake this.

Personal statement: This really is an open space for you to share additional aspects of you or experiences that you feel are important for selection committees to know about you. This last part is key—you will be judicious in determining what that is. But many candidates discuss aspects of their own background, cross-cultural experiences, etc. It can also be a place to include necessary items (e.g. professional aspirations, community service plans) if you really weren’t able to fit them into the SGP or to expand on something important and relevant that you touched upon in the SGP. But do not repeat information that’s already in the SGP. Use your space wisely because you’ve got a limited amount and probably a lot you want to say.

Checking your essays: Some editing tips for you:

  • Look at each paragraph and write down the main points of the paragraph. Are you covering all the points you need to? Do they flow logically? Are there sentences in there that don’t advance your points? If so, cut!
  • It’s important to have the right balance between general assertions and specific details or examples that illustrate the general statement. Beware too many general statements or vague descriptors—it’s just not helpful in learning more about you, your project, your motivation.
  • Beware overuse of adjectives and adverbs. For these essays, too many just get in the way of your meaning.
  • Proof! Ask someone else to proof too! Make sure the spelling is correct, watch out for homophones (spell check will miss those), awkward phrasing, sentence fragments, or repetitions of certain words.
  • Be assertive and direct in your phrasing. Imagine yourself in this role. Say “I will”, “I am,” as opposed to “I hope to” or “I think/feel I am.”
  • Be mindful of colloquial expressions. I steer candidates away from “I love,” for example, as a way of conveying enthusiasm. What may be fine and typical in informal speech may not be the most effective way of conveying what you want in these statements.

Short Answer Questions: Don’t forget these! These too should be clear, concise, to-the-point and content consistent with what you discuss in the essays.

Listing of Activities: You have strict space constraints. So again, include what is most relevant and important for this application. And describe what the activity/organization is in a way that it is understandable to an outside reader. This may mean altering the name slightly so that a reader understand what this organization/position is/does.

You have little space with which to work, so you want to use it to your best advantage.

And again, Fulbright has a great Application Tips section on the website. Do read this. Do follow the advice there. Do check your own work to make sure you are addressing the necessary points and reviewing for grammar and tone BEFORE sharing with me or with other readers for feedback.

Appointment or application questions: Email us at fellowships@middlebury.edu .

For alumni applicants: if you are not currently enrolled as a graduate student at another institution, you can choose to apply through Middlebury College or At-Large. The primary difference is that if you apply through Middlebury, you will adhere to our internal deadline and will have a campus interview (via Skype or phone). The campus evaluation will be added to your application. You will also be counted as a Middlebury grantee, which we like! But statistically, Fulbright states that there is not advantage to either method of application.

Fulbright webinars and tutorials: are ongoing this summer. Check out http://us.fulbrightonline.org/about/videos-tutorialsand http://us.fulbrightonline.org/applicants/information-sessions  (click on webinars to see schedule).

Fulbright online application: Start your online application through this section http://us.fulbrightonline.org/applicants .

New Fulbright ETA: Timor-Leste

Timor- Leste ETA Program  (2 awards)  

Applicants should be mature and articulate individuals who are prepared to operate in a challenging environment with living standards that are not as high as those in the U.S. or those in the major cities of Southeast Asia. Applicants must be willing to take on either an urban (Dili) or rural (provinces) placement.  Candidates must be native English-speakers and need to be self-motivated, resourceful, flexible, independent, and outgoing, and prepared to manage with limited resources. Undergraduate or Master’s degrees with a focus on English, American Studies, or Education are preferred.  Prior teaching or tutoring experience will be helpful, and experience working with ESL/EFL learners is preferred.

Candidates with an interest in teaching conversational English at high school or university level will be considered.  Living standards are not as high as those in the U.S. or other cities of Southeast Asia, so candidates should exhibit the ability to adapt and be flexible. 

 For more info about applying for a Fulbright through Middlebury, see Summer Notes for Fulbright Applicants on this blog!

Summer 2017 Fulbright Notes–Read Carefully!

For those thinking about applying for a Fulbright grant in the fall, here are some notes and suggestions to get you started. Please read carefully!
If you haven’t yet sent me a preliminary application, we should talk! I am in and out this summer—so my ability to respond to you may be faster or slower depending on when you contact me. So be patient if I am slow to respond. My appointment (phone, Skype or in person) availability will be online at go/fellowships by June 6. You can also reach me at fellowships@middlebury.edu or x3183. And yes, even if you haven’t contacted me yet, you can still apply for a Fulbright this fall! Just make sure you adhere to the August/September deadlines below.

Appointment or application questions: Email us at fellowships@middlebury.edu .

For alumni applicants: if you are not currently enrolled as a graduate student at another institution, you can choose to apply through Middlebury College or At-Large. The primary difference is that if you apply through Middlebury,  you will adhere to our internal deadline and will have a campus interview (via Skype or phone). The campus evaluation will be added to your application. You will also be counted as a Middlebury grantee, which we like! But statistically, Fulbright states that there is not advantage to either method of application.

Fulbright webinars and tutorials: are ongoing this summer. Check out http://us.fulbrightonline.org/about/videos-tutorials and http://us.fulbrightonline.org/applicants/information-sessions  (click on webinars to see schedule).

Fulbright online application: Start your online application through this section http://us.fulbrightonline.org/applicants .

Internal deadlines: August 15–intend to apply deadline (see below); Sept 13 at noon–internal deadline. See details below.

Application Process and Suggested Timetable:
By June 15: Have read through carefully the Applicants section of the Fulbright website, any/all country pages you are considering and have identified the place, grant type, and project idea for your application and review the Application Tips section. The country pages are full of good information as well as the application tips!  Make sure you understand all the application components. Also check out the Fulbright webinars and videos for applicants here http://us.fulbrightonline.org/about/videos-tutorials –these can be helpful. If you need an affiliation for your application (likely for study/research grants), you should be reaching out to appropriate organizations and individuals about this now. Depending on the country, this can be a slow process, so you do not want to leave this until later. Your faculty advisors may have helpful suggestions about academic contacts in country. You may also find the Fulbright scholar directory helpful http://www.cies.org/fulbright-scholars . This is a list of academics from other countries who have had grants to the US, so they are very knowledgeable about this program.
By July 1: Create an account for the Fulbright U.S. Student Application 2016-2017 online. Link available through the “Applicant” section of the Fulbright website http://us.fulbrightonline.org/applicants . You may begin filling out the application, but DO NOT submit names of recommenders until you have talked with me about who you plan to select. Why? Because when you enter recommender names into the Embark system, an email link is sent to them, allowing them to upload a confidential letter. If you change your mind about who you want, that can create awkward situations. Also note that you will be applying through Middlebury College.
By July 15: Draft research proposal and/or application essays. This is particularly important for the study/research or digital storytelling grants. Send to me and (as possible) share with relevant faculty/advisors for feedback. Relevant faculty/advisors are people who know something about the academic project and/or geographic area. ETA applications are a little less complicated, but still require effective essays.
By August 15: Have requested letters of recommendations to be submitted before noon on September 13. Request your language evaluation (if needed) now too.
August 15 “Intend to Apply” Deadline: You must send me a copy of your Fulbright application materials (pdf or .doc for essays) in its current state in Embark for me to review.  I realize this will not be a polished application.  Recommendations, transcripts, affiliation letters, etc. not needed at this time (but if you have an affiliation lined up, include a copy of that).  I will review your materials, send comments as needed, and you can continue working on your application. We will order Middlebury transcripts (no charge) for those who have an active application in the Fulbright Embark online system only. If you do not send me your materials by this date, we will not order you a transcript and you will need to take care of this yourself. I also may be less able to provide you with substantive comments on your essays. If you are a transfer student,  you will need to obtain a transcript from your previous institution. We will send pdf copies of the Middlebury transcript to you in time to upload for the Middlebury internal deadline below. If you discontinue your application after this point, that is ok–just let me know.
September 13 at noon (Wed): Submit your complete and polished Fulbright application in the Embark online system. All components of your application should be done at this point. Essays must be polished with no grammatical or spelling errors. There will be very limited opportunities for revision after this date, generally in cases where there are observations made during the campus interview process that need attention. If you have late recommendations or problems with an affiliation letter, please still submit and be in touch with fellowships about the issue.
Late September: You will sign up for a brief interview about your application. This interview is required for us to evaluate your strength as a candidate and we share that evaluation with Fulbright.
October 4: All must be done, proofed, in place, etc by end of day for me to send your application to Fulbright on October 6.
Most of these deadlines above are not absolutes, but guidelines intended to help you organize the different parts of the application and get everything done so that you are ready to go by the September deadline. Note: the campus submission deadline and campus interview are hard deadlines.

A few important notes:

  • Faculty and contacts abroad may be less available when the semester is not in session. Contacts abroad may also have a different response time to email than you are used to—so you need to allow several weeks in many cases to secure your letters of affiliation and/or research proposal feedback.
  • Letters of affiliation should be on university/organization letterhead, written in English and signed by recommender. If written in another language, you can provide the English translation yourself and upload  the translation with the signed letter. You may also have more than one affiliation if that is relevant for your project.
  • When asking for letters of recommendation: for Middlebury faculty/staff, ask at least 4 weeks in advance of the deadline. For recommenders from elsewhere, depending on where, you may need to allow even more time. When asking for a letter, share your current draft of a research proposal or ETA statement of purpose and a current resume. Also share the recommender guidelines from Fulbright. You want your letters to address the selection criteria Fulbright is evaluating you on!
  • For you ETA folks, you will need 3 recommendations using a short answer form.  The questions focus on ways in which you express yourself in English; whether you have any demonstrated experience with teaching/mentoring; how well you work in unstructured situations; and anything else that would have bearing on your ability to work successfully in the ETA position. You can find a copy of the sample form and instructions to the recommenders here: http://us.fulbrightonline.org/instructions-for-eta-recommendation-writers 
  • Some research proposals will require IRB approval. What’s that? Why might you need it? Look at go/irb for guidance . You DO NOT need IRB approval to submit the Fulbright application in September. But if you’re selected as a finalist in January, we have you go through the approval process (if needed) so that when you do receive the grant, you will have a safe and vetted research proposal and methodology ready to go. Point being, be aware that your research proposal may fall into this category and know that conversation about this may come up during the campus interview in October.
  • All letters of affiliation and recommendations must be in English. If your letter is written in another language, there must be a translation provided in addition to the original. For letters of affiliation, you can provide that translation, since this is not confidential and you upload that letter. For letters of recommendation, your recommender must obtain that translation (and not from you!) and upload both documents him/herself.
  • Some countries require you to submit your essays in the host country language too–so read the country requirements carefully.
  • Performing/creative arts candidates: You will need to submit your supplemental materials by the Sept. 13 deadline as well.
  • Transcripts: if you transferred to Middlebury or have courses from other schools that are relevant, you are responsible for obtaining and uploading these transcripts.
  • Foreign language evaluation form: required for non-English speaking countries. Some exceptions for ETA grants—but read the country/grant information carefully. In many cases, you will be able to take care of this in September with a Middlebury faculty member-though the schedule is very tight this year because of the semester start date and the internal deadline, so be in touch with the relevant faculty member well in advance. If you’re an alumnus or seeking evaluation in a language not taught at Middlebury, you would need to find an appropriate professional language teacher to complete the form and you can contact Middlebury faculty members as well. If using the same person for a foreign language evaluation AND a recommendation, you must provide two different email addresses for them in the system.
  • Critical Language Enhancement Award Statement is required ONLY if you’re applying for one! The Critical Language Scholarship grants may also be a good source of additional language support prior to the Fulbright grant beginning— see http://us.fulbrightonline.org/about/types-of-awards/critical-language-enhancement-award  .