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Campus & Community

Preparing International Fulbright Students for Graduate School (Podcast)

Tuesday, August 6, 2024, By John Boccacino
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'Cuse Conversations PodcastCollege of Professional StudiesGlobal Diversityinternational studentsSchool of Information StudiesStudents
Headshots of two members of the Fulbright Pre-Academic Program, with the accompanying text El-Baz Abdallah and Budoor Alsaadi. There's the Cuse Conversations podcast logo and an Orange block S logo.

On this episode of the “‘Cuse Conversations” podcast, El-Baz Abdallah and Budoor Alsaadi discuss their experiences as international Fulbright students participating in the pre-academic program, how they adjusted to life as students in the United States and how they plan on using their research to make a difference.

Each summer, the hosts a prestigious preparatory program that helps dozens of international Fulbright Scholars begin their journeys to graduate degrees and research opportunities.

It’s called the , and 黑料不打烊 has served as a proud host site for the last 10 years, celebrating the power of both an international education and a cultural exchange.

This year, 44 master鈥檚 and Ph.D. students聽from 20 countries around the world are spending four weeks on campus discovering American culture, learning about life as a graduate student in the U.S. and developing necessary research skills.

The program is operated on campus by the (ELI), sponsored by the U.S. Department of State鈥檚 Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs and administered by the Institute of International Education.

Each morning, the ELI offers English courses and lessons, including how to write a research paper as a graduate student. In the afternoons, cultural presentations and workshops are offered by 黑料不打烊 faculty and staff.

These international scholars are connected to a facilitator, a graduate of the pre-academic program who offers advice, guidance and friendship while mentoring these aspiring researchers. On the weekends, participants can take advantage of social field trips to cultural destinations like Niagara Falls and Green Lakes State Park.

A man smiles for a headshot while standing outside.

El-Baz Abdallah

Before departing for their graduate schools, the students give poster presentations on their research as a potential springboard to the research they will conduct for their capstone project.

鈥淭hrough my research, I want to see how we can use technology and data information to better people鈥檚 lives,鈥 says El-Baz Abdallah, a facilitator from the Comoro Islands who is entering his second year studying data analytics in the . 鈥淲hen I heard about the pre-academic program, I had been working for some time and hadn鈥檛 really thought about going back to school for my master鈥檚 degree, but the prestigiousness of the Fulbright program really stood out. There鈥檚 such a great impact, not just from the curriculum or the academics but the networking with your fellow scholars. This program was very rigorous, but it was really worth it.鈥

A woman poses for a headshot.

Budoor Alsaadi

鈥淔rom how we should be writing up our research and our bibliographies to what it means to do research as a graduate student in the United States, I鈥檝e been really happy with all of the information I鈥檝e learned that helps us adapt to the educational system here,鈥 says Budoor Alsaadi, a native of Iraq who is pursuing a master鈥檚 degree in civil engineering with a focus in environmental engineering at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

In this 鈥溾機use Conversation,鈥 Abdallah and Alsaadi discuss their beneficial experiences as international Fulbright students participating in the pre-academic program, how they acclimated to life as students in the United States and how they plan on using their research to make a difference.

Check out podcast featuring Abdallah and Alsaadi. A transcript [PDF]聽is also available.

How has this program helped with your academic transition to graduate school and your cultural adjustment?

El-Baz Abdallah: This program helped me tremendously. It was a big adjustment in terms of the food, the people, the culture and the language. Before I came here, I spoke English every day but had to think about what I wanted to say in French first and then express myself in English. But the College of Professional Studies made our transitions so easy. They set me up with a host family, which is a proud tradition here, and that host family became like a second family for me.

Academically, the program taught me how to directly interact with the professor if we have a question about a lecture or a topic. Back home, you would go to class and take notes, but here, we learned you can actually ask questions of your professor. We learned about office hours where you can go and discuss the topic if there鈥檚 something you didn鈥檛 understand. These are things I wouldn鈥檛 have known about being a master鈥檚 student in America were it not for the pre-academic program.

Budoor Alsaadi: There was a lot of new information to learn. There was so much harmony in the program because we鈥檙e all international students trying to figure things out while supporting each other. Everyone has been so kind, sweet and caring and willing to help each other out. We鈥檙e learning but we鈥檙e also having fun.

Another great thing is how many different cultures are in this program. There are students from more than 20 countries here, so we get to learn about their cultures, music, foods and languages. It鈥檚 great that Fulbright brings together these people from different backgrounds and experiences to learn from each other.

How do you plan on using your degree to make a difference in the world?

Alsaadi: I want to study water treatment and water pollution, which is a rising problem in my country and all over the world. It鈥檚 a problem that needs much more attention, because one day, we鈥檙e going to have very limited resources for water. Water technology is a broad field with a lot of opportunities, and I wanted to accelerate my knowledge on this topic at an early age so I can be well-equipped to make a difference in my career.

Most people in Iraq drink groundwater because the water in the rivers has high levels of total dissolved solids (TDS), which is expensive to treat and turn into drinking water. I hope that, through my research, I can go back to Iraq and find new technologies and new chemicals that can help with treating TDS. I want to discover a solution that can improve the water quality in my country and help deal with this ongoing and increasing water shortage.

Abdallah: My studies combine data science and artificial intelligence (AI), how to actually build AI models to harness information or data. I鈥檝e been involved with two projects I鈥檓 passionate about. One was analyzing the energy consumption trends of New Yorkers to study how low-income people can improve their energy consumption through incentives from the government. Another project was working with my mother, who is a gynecologist back home on Comoros Island, to enhance maternal health care and address the big problem of women losing their baby without knowing it. For my capstone research project, I鈥檓 building an AI model to analyze the mother鈥檚 and the baby鈥檚 heart rates, analyzing the existing data and looking at gaps in the data to ensure that when this happens, we can act so mothers don鈥檛 have to move from their rural home to the capital city, or from one island to another, to get medical attention.

Note: This conversation was edited for brevity and clarity.

  • Author

John Boccacino

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