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October 29, 2012 Special IIE.Interactive
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The United States currently hosts the largest number of students participating in the Brazil government's Scientific Mobility Program, according to a new briefing paper released today by the Institute of International Education (IIE). The paper, The Brazil Scientific Mobility Undergraduate Program in the United States: A New Phase in U.S. Brazil Educational Exchange, presents findings from an analysis of the first year of the program in the United States. The IIE Briefing Paper is available on IIE’s website at www.iie.org/brazilreport

IIE’s President launched the report today at a special event hosted by the American Chamber of Commerce in São Paulo, titled "Creating the New Generation of Innovators through Experience Abroad."  Dr. Goodman also announced a new corporate membership program that will help private sector corporations connect with global talent and the more than 1,200 colleges and universities that are part of the Institute’s IIENetwork membership program. To help U.S. institutions implement and sustain partnerships with institutions in Brazil, IIE also announced the launch of a new International Academic Partnership Program with Brazil.  

In July 2011, Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff announced the creation of a new scholarship program known as Ciência sem Fronteiras, a multiyear initiative to send 75,000 fully funded Brazilian students abroad for training in the science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) fields, with an additional 25,000 scholarships expected to be funded by the private sector. 

IIE has been working closely with Commission for Educational Exchange between the United States and Brazil, with CAPES, the Brazilian federal agency Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior, and with CNPq, Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico, an organization within the Ministry of Science and Technology, over the past year on bringing the undergraduate students in this program, now titled the Brazil Science Mobility Program, to the United States to complete up to one year of non-degree study, in addition to an academic training or internship component.

The program was created to promote scientific research, invest in and fund educational resources within Brazil and outside of the country, increase international cooperation in science and technology, and initiate and engage students in a global dialogue through international education. Scholarships are available for students to study in their choice of one of more than 12 countries. The United States currently hosts the largest number of these Brazilian students, followed by France, Portugal, and Spain. 

Report Highlights: 
  • According to the report, 1,954 Brazilian undergraduate scholarship students have been placed at 238 U.S. host institutions in 46 U.S. states as of the fall 2012 semester. The program is projected to enroll 2,500 students per academic year for the next five years of the program. 
  • Nearly three-fourths (71 percent) of the students are enrolled in engineering and computer science courses, specifically in mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, computer sciences, industrial engineering, and chemical engineering.
  • The top five U.S. host states are: California, New York, Michigan, Illinois, and Ohio. 
  • The leading U.S. host institutions are University of California - Davis, University of Nebraska - Lincoln, Iowa State University, University of Colorado - Boulder, University of Illinois at Urbana, Champaign, and Western Michigan University, each hosting more than 30 Brazilian undergraduate scholarship students. 
  • Nearly one-third (31 percent) of students participated in internships, and IIE has identified nearly 100 corporate partners/internship hosts so far, including major global corporations such as Amgen, Boeing, Cargill, DuPont, GE, and Praxair. 

New International Academic Partnership Program with Brazil: 

At the American Chamber of Commerce in Brazil event, IIE also announced the fourteen U.S. campuses that have been selected to take part in this year’s International Academic Partnership Program with Brazil. IIE's Center for International Partnerships in Higher Education will work closely with the campuses on a year-long strategic planning process in the current academic year, and they will take part in an IIE-led U.S. higher education delegation to Brazil next spring. 

The participating U.S. campuses are: Arizona State University, Ball State University, California State University – Long Beach, Central College, Fort Hays State University, Indian Hills Community College, Morgan State University, Parsons The New School for Design, Savannah State University, SUNY Plattsburgh, The University of Tulsa, Washington and Jefferson College, Webster University, and Western Michigan University.  For more information about the program, please go to:  www.iie.org/Who-We-Are/News-and-Events/Press-Center/Press-Releases/2012/10-26-2012-Brazil-Delegation-Press-Release
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