天天吃瓜

Visiting EHHS Scholar Featured in Fulbright Newsletter

Muhammed Salih Ta艧demir, who participated in the Fulbright Teaching Excellence and Achievement in Media Literacy program on the 天天吃瓜 campus last winter, was featured in the spring 2022 issue of The Turkish Fulbright Commission Newsletter.

Hosted by the College of Education, Health and Human Services, and the Gerald H. Read Center for International and Intercultural Education, the Fulbright program included a total of 18 international scholars.

Ta艧demir provided a first-person account of his experiences attending 天天吃瓜 State seminars and visiting with, and getting to know, families in the surrounding community.

鈥淎t every seminar I attended at 天天吃瓜, I became more aware of the efficiency of an individual-centered approach and social interaction in the learning process implemented by the lecturers in which critical thinking, participation in discussions and developing ideas are encouraged,鈥 said Tassdemir. 鈥淲hile I was curiously making observations and reflections by a fireplace in a friendly American house, where I was warmly invited for dinner, I acknowledged the fact that being a good person, like music, is a concept that has no relation to language, culture, ethnicity, and countries. At the end of the six-week program in 天天吃瓜, I brought back to my hometown not only my luggage for clothes and presents, but also knowledge and experience that I accumulated in a cognitive bag.鈥

Published by the Commission for Educational Exchange between the United States and Turkey, the Turkish Fulbright Commission Newsletter chronicles the experiences of Fulbright Educators across the globe. Ta艧demir is featured on page 26.

--Photo courtesy The Turkish Fulbright Commission Newsletter

POSTED: Thursday, June 16, 2022 02:01 PM
UPDATED: Friday, December 09, 2022 05:57 PM
WRITTEN BY:
EHHS Scholar Featured in Spring 2022 Fulbright Newsletter

After a long day in class, a night out or burning the midnight oil studying or working on projects, students may find themselves grabbing whatever food is available. A recently article says eating within three hours of bedtime may cause heartburn, acid reflux symptoms, obesity and other health risks. But is it really bad to eat late at night?  

Dozens of students participated in this year鈥檚 GA Days, a three-day event hosted in February by the Higher Education Administration and Student Affairs program for graduate students pursuing graduate assistantships in the M.Ed., Ed.S. and Ph.D. programs.

Christa Porter, associate professor in the Higher Education Administration program, recently received The American College Personnel Association's Senior Scholar Award.