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妻友社区 professors win Department of State grant to expand study abroad programs

妻友社区 is one of 34 U.S. colleges and universities to be awarded a grant from the U.S. Department of State鈥檚 Increase and Diversify Education Abroad for U.S. Students (IDEAS) Program, which aims to develop and expand study abroad programs worldwide.
Dr. Neville Forlemu, associate professor of , and Dr. Boyko Gyurov, professor of , created the winning proposal. GGC will receive $35,000.
Forlemu, who spent a month in Thailand with 23 GGC students this summer, said the money will be used to help reach two essential goals: expand GGC鈥檚 learning abroad program to other continents and get more minority students involved in the program, especially African American males who historically don鈥檛 take advantage of study abroad programs.
鈥淪ix of the 23 students we took to Thailand this summer had never set foot outside the U.S.,鈥 said Forlemu. 鈥淚t was amazing. They had multiple academic and cultural experiences they would never have had otherwise. On top of that, they built connections between themselves through the excitement and adventure of traveling and developed long-lasting connections with students in Thailand. Our program really encourages those interactions. More students need to take advantage of these opportunities.鈥
Currently, GGC鈥檚 study abroad opportunities are mostly limited to Europe, Asia and South America. Forlemu said the first goal with the IDEAS grant money will be to expand to Cameroon, a central African country whose residents speak both English and French.

鈥淭o do that, we need to develop a system that consistently helps with the exposure of these opportunities and how our students can take advantage,鈥 said Forlemu. 鈥淲ith the IDEAS grant, we鈥檙e hoping to build relationships with programs in Cameroon in such a way that it鈥檚 sustainable. Having strong academic and logistical connections on the other end will help us with both 鈥 the academic and cultural aspects of the GGC Cameroonian program. We plan to create networks, serve as collaborators and create virtual exchanges to expand the opportunity to as much of our student population as possible.鈥
The IDEAS Program contributes to the State Department鈥檚 diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility efforts in engaging the American people in foreign policy. Since 2016, the program has awarded 179 grants to 173 U.S. colleges and universities in 49 states and territories to create, expand and diversify their U.S. study abroad programs in 71 countries across all world regions. In addition to the IDEAS grants, the program also offers opportunities for international educators at U.S. colleges and universities to participate in free virtual and in-person study abroad capacity-building activities.
鈥淚ncreasing and diversifying U.S. students going abroad for educational opportunities, as well as diversifying the places where they study, is a State Department priority,鈥 said Lee Satterfield, assistant U.S. secretary of state for Educational and Cultural Affairs. 鈥淭his year鈥檚 recipients reflect the true greatness of America 鈥 our diversity 鈥 as almost 25 percent represent two-year institutions, 40 percent represent minority-serving institutions and 25 percent represent rural-serving institutions.鈥