Complete all required fields: You should take care to accurately complete all of the required fields in this section.
Use proper capitalization and punctuation: This is a formal grant application and you are advised to follow the English language rules on capitalization and punctuation.
Provide an informative project title and abstract: These sections are a quick reference for screening committees and other reviewers. They should be able to determine the basic who, what, when, where, why and how of your project by reading this abstract. The project title should be informative, as well.
Develop an intellectually-compelling and feasible project: This is the most important factor in presenting a successful application. The first step is to familiarize yourself with the country summary for the program to which you are applying. Program design varies from country to country and while some countries encourage applicants to incorporate coursework into a project, others prefer independent research. You should ensure that your project design fits the program guidelines for the host country. Address the following points:
2. Design a feasible project: You must demonstrate that your research strategy is viable, including its content, methodology, and time frame. Address the following points:
Candidates applying through U.S. institutions are urged to consult professors in their major fields or with experience in the host country, as well as their Fulbright Program Advisers, about the feasibility of their proposed projects. At-Large applicants should consult qualified persons in their fields.
3. Be clear and concise: The individuals reading the proposal want applicants to get to the point about the 'who, what, when, where, why and how' of the project. Avoid discipline-specific jargon.
4.Organize the statement carefully: Don't make reviewers search for information. We urge you to have several people read and critique your Statement, including a faculty adviser, a faculty member outside your discipline, a fellow student, and/or a colleague.
5. Adhere to the following format:
At the top of each page include*:
Understand the affiliation requirements for the Fulbright Program in your country of application: Affiliation arrangements vary by country, so you should review carefully the affiliation information provided in the country summary. All academic grantees must have an affiliation in the host country.
Countries differ in the kinds of host affiliations that are acceptable. Examples of affiliations include universities, music or art academies, laboratories, libraries, non-governmental organizations, and so on. Pay special attention to the requirement in some countries to attend classes and/or affiliate with academic institutions.
Identify an appropriate affiliation for the project: The affiliation is your proposed host in the country of application. Fulbrighters have used a number of methods to contact potential hosts and solicit support for their projects. One primary method is to use the contacts and advisers that the you already have. Ask current or former professors to put you into contact with appropriate people in the host country.
If the proposal contains a strong research component, you must have host country contacts that can support the research, provide access to required resources, and/or advise you during the grant period. It is your responsibility to identify, contact, and secure an affiliation from a potential adviser.
Some potential avenues to help you identify an appropriate affiliation/host country adviser include:
Start early. Obtaining an affiliation letter from overseas can be a time-consuming process and sufficient lead time must be given to receive signed affiliation letters before the application deadline.
Request the affiliation letter: After identifying the appropriate host institution and the individual at that institution best suited to serve as an adviser for your proposed project, make contact with the potential adviser to see if he/she is willing to write an affiliation letter. Before requesting the letter, you should provide the author with a copy of your Statement of Grant Purpose. The affiliation letter should indicate the author’s willingness to work with you on the intended project and it should speak to the feasibility and validity of what is being proposed. The letter should also indicate any additional resources or contacts that the adviser can provide to support the work.
Affiliation letters must be printed on institutional letterhead and must be signed by the authors. Scanned versions of the original hard-copy letters with hand-written signatures should be uploaded into the application, and the letter writers can either send the original hard-copy letters or electronic copies to you. IIE will not accept any affiliation letters via email or fax sent to our office.
Since affiliation letters are not confidential, you will upload the letter yourself into the online application system. Affiliation letters written in a foreign language must be translated into English and both the original letters and the English-language translations must be uploaded into the application.
Instructions on uploading letters of affiliation are available within the online application system.
Make it Personal: This statement provides you with an opportunity to introduce yourself to the screening committee members on a personal level. The style is up to you, but the content should convey your background and your motivation for applying to the specific Fulbright Program in question and how this background relates to the proposed project and your future goals.
Do not repeat information from other parts of the application.
Adhere to the following format:
At the top of each page include:
For Commonly-Taught Languages: The Foreign Language Evaluation should be completed by a professional language teacher, preferably a university professor. The language evaluator cannot be related to the applicant.
For Less-Commonly-Taught Languages: If a professional language teacher is not readily available, a college-educated native-speaker of the language can be used. The language evaluator cannot be related to the applicant.
Provide your evaluators with Instructions for Foreign Language Evaluators. You can print these out and discuss them with the person completing the form.
After starting the online application, you can register the language evaluator. You can register a person with the same email for only one type of online reference, that is, either a reference or Foreign Language Evaluation. If you wish the same person to complete both a reference and an FLE, then the person must have two different email addresses. You can then register them once for the reference and once for the FLE.
In order to register your language evaluator and to have access to Form 7: Language Self-Evaluation, you must respond appropriately to the Embark Online Application Preliminary Question 3. If you did not request these forms, then click on the link in the upper right hand corner of the online application: Update my answers to preliminary questions.
Applicants proposing research involving human beings or animals as research subjects who plan to formally publish the results or to use the results in a graduate program should have their projects vetted by the Institutional Review Board (IRB) at their home institutions. At-large applicants should conduct an individual ethics review ensuring that their proposed projects are consistent with ethical standards for research involving humans as research participants as outlined in the National Guidelines for Human Subjects Research (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Extramural Research, National Institutes of Health), in the National Guidelines for Animal Welfare at the National Institutes of Health’s Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare or other applicable internationally recognized ethics guidance documents.
Human subjects research includes: clinical investigations (any experiment or study on one or more persons which involves a test product/article, whether a drug, treatment, procedure or device); social-behavioral studies which entail interaction with or observation of people, especially vulnerable populations (i.e., as minors, pregnant women, inmates, drug-users, the mentally impaired, displaced/refugee populations); and, basic scientific research to study the biology of animals, persons or organs and specimens thereof. The most fundamental issues in studies involving human research subjects include: valid scientific questions and approaches; potential social value; favorable risk-benefit ratio; fair selection of study participants and an adequately administered informed consent process.