While I have pursued each of these degrees at separate institutions in different countries, I feel that all of them are woven with the same Fulbright thread of international exchange. During my Fulbright year, I attributed the magical feeling of performing and studying in this city to the fact that Vienna is like Disneyland for musicians.
By the end of my Fulbright year, however, I realized that my transformative experience was all thanks to the international people, musical culture, and artistic history that make Vienna the colorful city it is.
I never could have imagined that my Fulbright experience would be so impactful that it would inevitably continue to affect my daily life and work years after I had returned to the US. From a research perspective, it was a natural progression for me to continue the vibrato research in Boston that I had begun in Austria. I was grateful to forge collaboration on the under-researched topic of vocal vibrato with renowned Austrian voice scientist Dr.
Christian Herbst and with Dr. Ian Howell, my advisor at NEC. With sources that I had gathered in Vienna, I worked to include several Austrian musical traditions and genres that had not been previously represented in voice science research, such as Austrian Schlager and operetta. I continued practicing my German-language skills by getting involved with the local Goethe-Institut Boston and becoming a German tutor and German-diction teaching assistant at NEC.
I also attended many events from the local Austro-American Association of Boston, where I met and exchanged experiences with former and current Fulbrighters. After my Fulbright year and back in the US, it has been a joy for me to broadly share my Fulbright story, not only in English but also in German.
Despite the challenges of community connections during the COVID pandemic, engaging in online platforms such as online webinars and the new Fulbrighter app made my engagement with the robust network of Fulbright alums stronger. The conference is designed to give participants an opportunity to reflect on their experiences in the U. Latif Lighari, who studied at the University of Missouri Columbia and is the associate administrator for Extension in the College of Agriculture, presented the keynote address at the opening dinner of the seminar.
He said these type of re-entry seminars, are vital for students returning to Pakistan. He emphasized the need for education in his home country and urged students to take all that they learned during their stay in the USA and use it to bring about positive change in Pakistan.
In keeping with the theme of the seminar, the students made thematic site visits to the Nashville Entrepreneur Center, the Nashville Incubation Center and Nashville International Airport. This quarter has been a significant one in terms of monumental anniversaries.
August 1st marked 75 years of View previous campaigns. Remember Me Login. July 26, Participants of the Fulbright re-entry seminar pose for a picture at TSU.
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