Archive for the ‘Grants’ Category

The A B Series presents Performing Artist and Poet John Giorno

Thursday, November 1st, 2012

“It doesn’t get better”… than John Giorno

John Giorno, an American poet with a penchant for the offbeat will be gracing the National Arts Centre’s (NAC) Fourth Stage next month as part of the A B Series.  The U.S. Embassy, Ottawa awarded a grant to the  A B Series to support the visit to Ottawa of John Giorno.  The U.S. Embassy grants partnership program supports the promotion of American culture in Canada.

Giorno, a long-time poet, has worked tirelessly to broaden the reach of his craft since the late 1960s when he set up “dial-a-poem” recordings of various poets reading their works.  He did this using an existing communications system, back before there were instances of “dial-a-anything” available.  Giorno wrote in an introduction to the collection of recorded poetry, now available online, “We established a new poet-audience relationship.”

Since that time, Giorno has expanded his poetry to include representations on canvas, such as those on display at the Almine Rech Gallery in Paris, France.  He also does live performances of many of his poems, including “THANKS FOR NOTHING”, “Just say NO to family values”, and “It doesn’t get better.”

This will be the internationally-renowned poet’s first performance in Ottawa.

Tickets for the November 7th, 7:30 p.m. performance can be purchased in person at the NAC Box Office or online at http://www.ticketmaster.ca/venue/131211?brand=nac&lang=en-ca.

 

Announcing the recipients of the 2011-2012 Community Leadership Program (CLP) grants

Wednesday, March 21st, 2012

U.S. Embassy Ottawa and Fulbright Canada are pleased to announce the recipients of the 2011-2012 Community Leadership Program (CLP) grants. The CLP supports Canadian alumni of US government exchange programs who would like to make a contribution in their community. The CLP provides up to $8,000 to groups of three or more alumni who identify a need in their community and a strategy for addressing that need. The three recipients of CLP grants in 2011-12, from Ottawa, Vancouver, and Sault Ste Marie are:

Team leader Ruth Dunley (Canadian Fulbright Scholar, 2004-2005, University of Ottawa to the College of William & Mary) will be hosting a National Capital History Fair in Ottawa that hopes to excite an interest in Canadian history and culture amongst Ottawa’s youth. Together with the Ottawa Citizen, the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board, the Historica-Dominion Institute, and her fellow Ottawa-based Fulbright alumni Ruby Heap, Ruth will host an event that will feature high-profile speakers, along with dynamic historical displays and activities.

Team leader Rainey Gaywish (Canadian Fulbright Student, 2005-2006, University of Manitoba to the Three Fires Society Culture & Education Center) received a CLP award to work with current Fulbright scholar Anne Dutlinger, and Singwauk Kinoomaage Gamig, the First Nation post-secondary institute in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. Rainey’s project, entitled “O’Mama Aki: Anishinabe Teachings on Clan Governance and Earth Stewardship for a Changing World”, is an outreach and education initiative to share Indigenous traditions of the Midewiwin with the youth in the surrounding area.

Team leader Lyana Patrick (Canadian Fulbright Student, 2004-2005, University of Victoria to the University of Washington) will partner with her fellow West Coast Fulbright alumni Naomi Bartz and William Damon and with the NGO Safe Amplification Society. Together, this group will host a two-day Community Arts and Youth Engagement Institue in Vancouver. The event, which will be free of charge and open to the public, will include workshops on topics related to music production, event planning, and performance.

We are pleased to be supporting these important projects and look forward to sharing the results as we move ahead. The leaders of these three projects welcome the support and participation of other alumni. If you are interested in getting involved in any of these projects, please contact us at info@fulbright.ca for more information!

American artist Sarah Walko featured in Ottawa art exhibition

Wednesday, February 1st, 2012

Exhibit: Preternatural

Where: The Canadian Museum of Nature, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

When: December 9th, 2011 to March 5th, 2012. 

Admission: Adult $10, Student $8, Senior $8, Child $6

With the assistance of a community partnership grant from the Embassy of the United States, New York based artist Sarah Walko’s  elaborate installation piece, It is least what one ever sees will feature in the exhibition Preternatural. The installation is made up of thousands of natural and organic specimens, which have been organized and displayed in test tubes. For Walko the test tubes are both containers for tiny worlds and symbols of scientific methodology. 

Sarah is a published poet and she includes snippets of text, cut and torn from books, among her specimens. Every tiny object she has collected tells a story that highlights the beauty and mystery of nature and culture and the fusion between the two. Walko’s work echoes the spirit of the Natural History Museum and the fascination with collecting, studying and telling stories through objects. 

Sarah is a multimedia sculptor/installation artist and writer, from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She is currently the Executive Director of the Triangle Arts Association, a non-profit arts organization in Brooklyn, New York and a writer for White Whale Review, an online literary journal. Recently her work has been shown in group exhibitions at the WORK gallery, Brooklyn, New York; The Last Supper Festival, Brooklyn, New York; and the El Museo De Arte in El Salvador.

 

For more information, please visit www.preternatural.ca

CALL FOR NOMINATIONS: Summer 2012 Study of the United States Institutes for Scholars

Friday, December 2nd, 2011

The Branch for the Study of the United States is pleased to invite candidate nominations for the summer 2012 Study of the United States Institutes for Scholars. A total of six institutes will be offered for university-level faculty and other scholars.

INSTITUTE DESCRIPTION:
Study of the United States Institutes for Scholars are intensive post-graduate level academic programs with university faculty and other scholars the opportunity to deepen their understanding of U.S. society, culture, and institutions. The ultimate goal is to strengthen curricula and to improve the quality of teaching about the United States in academic institutions abroad. The institutes will take place at various colleges and universities throughout the United States over the course of six weeks beginning in June 2012. Prospective applicants are encouraged to visit our website to obtain general information about the Institutes. The website address is:
http://exchanges.state.gov/academicexchanges/scholars.html

The Institute on American Politics and Political Thought will provide a multinational group of 18 foreign university faculty with a deeper understanding of U.S. political institutions and major currents in American political thought. The institute will offer an overview of political thought during the founding period (constitutional foundations), and the development and current functioning of the American presidency, Congress, and the federal judiciary. The examination of political institutions will include the electoral system, political parties and interest groups, the civil service system, media and think tanks, and the welfare/regulatory state. The institute will address modern political and cultural issues in the United States (including but not limited to civil rights, women’s rights, immigration, etc.) and the significance of public discourse in the formulation of public policy.

The Institute on Contemporary American Literature will provide a multinational group of up to 18 foreign university faculty and scholars with a deeper understanding of U.S. society and culture, past and present, through an examination of contemporary American literature. Its purpose is twofold: to explore contemporary American writers and writing in a variety of genres; and to suggest how the themes explored in those works reflect larger currents within contemporary American society and culture. The program will explore the diversity of the American literary landscape, examining how major contemporary writers, schools and movements reflect the traditions of the American literary canon. At the same time, the program will expose participants to writers who represent a departure from that tradition, and who are establishing new directions for American literature.

The Institute on Journalism and Media will provide a multinational group of 18 journalism faculty and other related specialists with a deeper understanding of the role of journalism and the media in U.S. society. It will examine major topics in journalism, including the concept of a free press, First Amendment rights, and the media’s relationship to the public interest. The legal and ethical questions inherent in journalistic endeavors will be incorporated into every aspect of the institute. The institute will cover strategies for teaching students of journalism the basics of the tradecraft: researching, reporting, writing, and editing. The program will also highlight technology’s impact on journalism, addressing the influence of the internet, the globalization of the news media, the growth of satellite television and radio networks, and other advances in media that are transforming the profession.

The Institute on Religious Pluralism in the United States will provide a multinational group of up to 18 foreign university faculty and practitioners with a deeper understanding of U.S. society and culture, past and present, through an examination of religious pluralism in the United States and its intersection with American democracy.
Employing a multi-disciplinary approach and drawing on fields such as history, political science, sociology, anthropology, law and others, the program will explore both the historical and contemporary relationship between church and state in the United States. Participants will examine the following aspects of religious pluralism in the United States: the ways in which religious thought and practice have influenced, and been influenced by, the development of American-style democracy; the intersections of religion and politics in the United States in such areas as elections, public policy, and foreign policy; and the sociology and demography of religion in the United States today, including a survey of the diversity of contemporary religious beliefs and its impact on American politics.

The Institute on U.S. Culture and Society will provide a multinational group of 18 experienced and highly-motivated foreign university faculty and other specialists with a deeper understanding of U.S. society, culture, values, and institutions. The Institute will examine the ethnic, racial, economic, political, and religious contexts in which various cultures have manifested themselves in U.S. society, and the ways in which these cultures have influenced both social movements and historical epochs throughout U.S. history. The program will draw from a diverse disciplinary base, and will itself provide a model of how a foreign university might approach the study of U.S. culture and society.

The Institute on U.S. Foreign Policy will provide a multinational group of 18 foreign university faculty and scholars with a deeper understanding of how U.S. foreign policy is formulated and implemented. The Institute will focus on United States Foreign Policy making through an exploration of domestic politics and players with emphasis on how each entity shapes U.S. perspectives and action on international issues. The four-week academic residency program will be complemented by two weeks of study tours of diverse loci of foreign policy-making: including Chicago and Washington, DC. The Institute program will also include day trips to Orlando, Tampa, Tallahassee, and historic St. Augustine.

OTHER ESSENTIAL PROGRAM INFORMATION:
Program Funding: The program is fully funded for participants through grants from the Bureau of Education and Cultural Affairs and Mission Canada.

CANDIDATE DESCRIPTION AND QUALIFICATIONS:
Candidates should be mid-career, typically between the ages of 30-50, highly-motivated and experienced professionals generally from institutions of higher education or research focused organizations (non-profits, think tanks, etc.). While the educational level of participants will likely vary, most should have graduate degrees and have substantial knowledge of the thematic area of the institute.

NOMINATION FORMAT:
Nominations must be submitted to Washington by midnight Sunday, January 15, 2012. If you would like to be considered, please contact us no later than Wednesday, January 4.

CALL FOR NOMINATIONS: Summer 2012 Study of the United States Institutes for Secondary School Educators

Friday, December 2nd, 2011

Seeking Secondary School Educators:The Branch for the Study of the United States is pleased to invite candidate nominations for the summer 2012 Study of the United States Institutes for Secondary School Educators to take place over the course of six weeks beginning in mid June 2012. Two institutes for secondary educators will be offered. 

For this program Secondary Educators include classroom teachers, teacher trainers, curriculum developers, textbook writers, and ministry of education officials, among others. Please note that Study of the United States Institutes are not considered Fulbright programs. This change occurred in FY 2005 when the program changed from the Fulbright American Studies Institutes to the Study of the United States Institutes.

Institute Description:

The Study of the United States Institutes for Secondary School Educators will provide two multinational groups of 30 secondary educators each with a deeper understanding of U.S. society, education, and culture, past and present. The programs will be organized around a central theme or themes in U.S. studies and will have a strong contemporary component. Through a combination of traditional, multi-disciplinary, and interdisciplinary approaches, the programs will elucidate the history and evolution of U.S. educational institutions and values. The programs also serve to illuminate contemporary political, social, and economic debates in American society.
The ultimate goal is to strengthen curricula and to improve the quality of teaching about the United States in secondary schools and other academic institutions abroad.

One institute will take place at the Institute for Training and Development in Amherst, MA, and the second institute will take place at California State University, Chico. The institute in Amherst, MA will host mainly secondary educators whose primary activities are classroom teaching while the institute in Chico, CA will host administrators (including teacher trainers, curriculum developers, textbook writers, ministry of education officials,
and others).  Prospective applicants are encouraged to visit our website to obtain general information about the Institutes.
The website address is:
http://exchanges.state.gov/academicexchanges/scholars.html

CANDIDATE DESCRIPTION AND QUALIFICATIONS:
Candidates should be mid-career, typically between the ages of 30-50, highly-motivated and experienced secondary school educators. The ideal candidate will be a secondary teacher, teacher trainer, curriculum developer, textbook writer, ministry of education official, or other related professional with responsibility for secondary education who is seeking to
introduce or enhance aspects of U.S. studies into his/her curricula.
NOMINATION DEADLINE:
The Embassy or Consulate must submit your nomination by midnight Sunday, January 15, 2012.  Therefore, if you are interested, please contact us by Wednesday, January 4th.

La Petite Mort Gallery and the U.S. Embassy Presents Axel Void’s “Mediocre” exhibit

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

The importance of art in daily life cannot be underestimated: it has the power to inspire thought, stir emotions, and rouse the senses. La Petite Mort Gallery, supported by the U.S. Embassy, will host critically-acclaimed American artist Alejandro Hugo Dorda Mevs’ (aka Axel Void) exhibition Mediocre to Ottawa June 3 – 26, 2011. A vernissage (reception) will be held on the opening night of Friday June 3th from 7 – 10pm with the artist in attendance.

Alejandro’s work focuses on the subversive and on the hidden facets of our society. Documenting different situations from sweet to bitter to numb, he doesn’t pretend to show a way of life, only to represent different aspects of everyday life. Alejandro describes the exhibition as “the story of those who won’t appear in the history books, which essentially is the rest of us.” By exploring the role of art in alienation and in critical transformation, the exhibition connects with the reality that art is a social voice which can communicate in ways that traditional mediums cannot.

One of Axel Void's most recent works

La Petite Mort Gallery is located at 306 Cumberland Street in the heart of Ottawa’s Byward Market.

Sister Cities International Awarded U.S. Department of State Grant to Implement “Youth Ambassadors Program: North America”

Monday, December 20th, 2010

Award provides funding for trilateral exchanges between Canada, Mexico, and U.S. sister cities over the summer of 2011 and 2012.

Washington, DC: Sister Cities International is the recipient of a U.S. Department of State award to administer the Youth Ambassador’s Program: North America. This program will bring high school students and educators from the U.S., Canada, and Mexico together for a three-week exchange during the summer of 2011 and 2012. Cities were chosen based on existing trilateral relationships with their North American partners.

Each summer, three U.S. cities will be chosen to host the U.S.-based exchange. 2011 cities will be Phoenix, AZ; Scottsdale, AZ; and Mesa, AZ. Their Canadian sister cities are Calgary, Alberta; Burnaby, BC; and Kingston, Ontario respectively. 2012 participating cities will be Modesto, CA, Los Angeles, CA, and Culver City, CA. Their Canadian sister cities are Vernon, BC; Vancouver, BC; and Lethbridge, Alberta respectively.

Harold Pereverseff, President of the Lethbridge Twinning Society in Lethbridge, Alberta has been recruited by Sister Cities International as the country coordinator for Canada. His responsibilities entail networking with the various participant cities in Canada and to assist in the selection of students that will be referred to Sister Cities for final approval along with monitoring and reporting of the recruitment and travel plans for the selected students/chaperones. Harold will be working to strengthen the institutional partnerships between Sister Cities International and the various Canadian twinning organizations.

Harold Pereverseff – 403-381-0038 Cell: 403-330-6119 e-mail: hcbmkwaq@telusplanet.net

The Youth Ambassadors Program: North America
This grant award is an extension of an exchange program of the U.S. Department of State that illustrates the U.S. policy priority of engaging youth across North America. As a way of continuing the conversation of cooperation and mutual understanding across the continent and the hemisphere, this program will include high school students and adults who work with youth. The educational program will focus on poverty and the environment, showing local and national examples of how cities and countries are working to alleviate the negative effects of both issues. Students will spend time in their U.S. sister cities and Washington, D.C., participating in small group workshops, cultural activities, and homestays. All participants will be tasked with identifying the poverty and environmental issues in their community and implementing an outreach project to address one of these issues once they return home.

About Sister Cities International
Sister Cities International facilitates nearly 2,000 partnerships in 136 counties on six continents between 600 communities in the Unites States with similar municipalities abroad. Sister Cities International represent citizen diplomats who work tirelessly to promote the organizations’ mission of creating world peace and cultural understanding through economic and sustainable development programs, youth and education projects, arts and culture, as well as humanitarian assistance.

U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
The Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) promotes international mutual understanding through a wide range of academic, cultural, professional, and sports exchange programs. ECA exchanges engage youth, students, educators, artists, athletes, and emerging leaders in many fields in the United States and in more than 160 countries. Alumni of ECA exchanges comprise over one million people around the world, including more than 51 Nobel Laureates and more than 340 current or former heads of state and government. More information on their programs can be found at http://exchanges.state.gov/.

MEDIA CONTACT: Jennelle Root, 202.347.863 x4003. More information about Sister Cities International can be found at www.sister-cities.org. Facebook: Sister Cities International. Twitter: @SisterCityIntl.

Canada-U.S. Exchange Alumni: Apply Now for the Community Leadership Program

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

If YOU are an alumna/alumnus of a U.S. Embassy/U.S. government-sponsored exchange program and have an idea for a creative outreach event, a special activity or a unique program in your community in Canada, apply now for the Community Leadership Program (CLP), co-sponsored by the U.S. Embassy and Fulbright Canada. This is an opportunity to take action, to get involved, and to help make your community and the world a better place.

As an alumnus/alumna, you know that the mandate of the U.S. Embassy and Fulbright Canada is to foster mutual understanding between the people of the United States and the people of Canada. As ambassadors for your country and intellectual leaders in your fields, you are key to providing community leadership on environmental and social justice issues, as well as community development efforts. As such, the Embassy is pleased to announce a new partnership with Fulbright Canada in offering this unique Community Leadership Program grant opportunity across Canada. During this inaugural year of the CLP, we want to encourage you to apply for a grant award (valued up to $8,000USD) to undertake a project in your community.

You must apply in teams of at least three alumni (Canadians, Americans, and all USG exchange program alumni are eligible), including a project manager who must be a Canadian. All participants must currently be living in Canada. If you have a project idea, but don’t know other alumni in your region, please contact the Embassy’s Alumni Coordinators, or Jennifer Regan, Chief Program Officer at Fulbright Canada. The Embassy’s Alumni Coordinators and Jennifer will contact potential partners on your behalf and assist you in further developing your application.

You are also encouraged to include at least one community partner. In addition to bringing together alumni, the CLP aspires to bring together local universities, NGOs, and other community groups to plan and implement the project.

For purposes of the grant competition, we have divided Canada into six regions: Atlantic Canada (NL, NS, NB, and PEI), Ontario, Québec, the prairies (MB, SK, and AB), British Columbia, and the North (YT, NWT, and NU). We are aiming to grant at least one award in each region.

We encourage you to submit a Community Leadership Program Project Application. The proposals will be reviewed by a joint U.S. Embassy-Fulbright Canada committee. Proposals will be evaluated based on the following criteria:

  1. The potential for positive impact on the community, particularly among youth;
  2. The degree of alumni, community, and partner engagement;
  3. Creativity in achieving program mandate;
  4. Cost effectiveness.

EXAMPLES of possible project proposals include:

  • Training workshops on topics such as leadership, teamwork building, entrepreneurship, financial literacy, or the value of international exchange for youth audiences;
  • A literacy program for new Canadians;
  • A community building project (similar to a Habitat for Humanity project);

If you would like to participate in the project in your region, but would prefer to be involved in a project led by another alumna/alumnus, you may sign up as a “volunteer alumni team member” by completing the CLP application for volunteers. The Canadian alumna/alumnus who proposes the project will be the project manager and will be responsible for managing the funds and the efforts of the other alumni partners and those alumni who have volunteered to be part of the program.

Projects will not be approved that:

  • Request funding for individual professional development;
  • Finance overhead expenses for existing institutions.

Please see the CLP Terms & Conditions for more details. Applications must be submitted online to CLP@fulbright.ca and must be received by December 15, 2010. If you have any questions, please contact Fulbright Canada at CLP@fulbright.ca.