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  • When youre finishing up your Peace Corps experience, you think about what that next step is.

  • For me, the Fellows program was an opportunity to keep doing the service,

  • but also a chance to try out something and think about my next big career step.

  • I’m doing work that is important to people and building strengths on a community level.

  • I knew I wanted to go into graduate school, but I knew I’d rather have work experience to start

  • before I fully decided what type of program I really wanted to go into.

  • Fellows/USA is a program that offers financial benefits to returned Peace Corps Volunteers who want to earn a master’s degree,

  • a doctoral degree, or professional certification. Peace Corps Fellows use the skills they developed working abroad

  • to complete internships in underserved U.S. communities while gaining both academic credit and valuable on-the-job experience.

  • The Fellows/USA program is offered at more than 50 universities across the country and works in partnership with community organizations.

  • Prior to Peace Corps, I worked in banking so I did banking for about four years and decided that I didn’t really enjoy that.

  • So I joined the Peace Corps and it sort of helped me hone in on what my interests are and I decided to study public policy.

  • I served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Burkina Faso in a rural small town. There was no running water and no electricity.

  • I served as a secondary education volunteer where I taught math and English to 7th and 9th graders

  • and it was a wonderful experience.

  • I’d never taught before so it was very challenging.

  • I think that it has opened my eyes to the types of things that I would like to do

  • and the way we interact as Americans with the world.

  • So, there were a lot of things that I considered when I thought about returning back to the States

  • and I knew I wanted to get a graduate degree.

  • I looked specifically at the Fellows Programs because there was a diversity of degrees that were available,

  • not just public policy or international development.

  • Fellows/USA partners with schools to provide education choices to accommodate a variety of needs.

  • With hundreds of degree programs available, there is likely to be one to match your interests;

  • and with campuses all over the country, there are multiple locations to choose from.

  • I’m going to be at the University of Oregon for my Master’s degree in an interdisciplinary program

  • that’s focusing on sustainable type issues.

  • So, it’s really been a perfect marriage of the practical- getting the PC experience of different projects,

  • but then project management here in the States working on economic development as well.

  • I’m currently working managing a rural economic development project

  • and were working with youth entrepreneurship through the WK Kellogg Foundation.

  • Justin’s been a support to us in terms of what were trying to do with our students in small business development here.

  • We have a philosophy in using the community as a classroom. So, somebody who has experience with Peace Corps

  • has experience with worldwide issues and bringing any kind of knowledge of the global economy or current events

  • into an environment like this is healthy because a lot of our students may not know what’s going on

  • outside of Lincoln city or Lincoln County.

  • No matter how a particular Fellows/USA program is structured, Fellows complete a substantial,

  • degree-related internship that focuses on real community needs.

  • Fellows work under the guidance of school mentors and community partners who are dedicated professionals.

  • Internships may be part time or full time, and vary in length from three months to two years.

  • Youre placed with a service or a nonprofit organization or a municipal government or a county government

  • so you essentially have a high level of responsibility and youre focused on a specific project

  • so the caliber of work that you do and the need that youre meeting is really high.

  • Similar to Peace Corps in that you have to come in and you have to project design and management

  • and implement all of these projects and youre in charge of them.

  • So the amount of professional experience that you gain through the Fellows program is fantastic.

  • A basic component of every Fellows/USA program is financial aid designed to reduce studentsout-of-pocket expenses.

  • Depending on the partner school, Fellows receive benefits that may include reduced tuition, scholarships,

  • assistantships, stipends, health insurance, or housing allowances.

  • I think another benefit of the Fellows Program is that there’s an incredible network of RPCVs.

  • I’ve met my roommates through the Fellows listserv and I found housing through that

  • and then theyve been helping me with my course schedule and places to find internships.

  • The Fellows program naturally gives you a community, an intellectual community, so people are not just talking about,

  • in my case, education, but I’m in this community with other educators or people whove had the experience being on the ground,

  • bringing another perspective, a global perspective to classrooms.

  • The cohesion is very clear among the students from start to finish. They not only come in with that special bond,

  • it is enhanced when they become a part of our student community. They have established an RPCV alumni group,

  • they participate in professional development seminars, and also a number of service activities throughout the community and region.

  • Peace Corps Volunteers of any age who satisfactorily complete their service have lifetime eligibility for Fellows/USA.

  • This program will help you bring your skills talents and experiences back home.

  • In fact, internships may lead to permanent job offers from community partners. Regardless of the path you take,

  • you will have the experience and credentials to excel at a career anywhere in the world.

  • After graduate school, I started working at the State Department on a contract and I worked as a partnership analyst for the Global Partnership Center.

  • My PhD is in International Education Policy and I’m currently the project director

  • for the Prince George’s teaching corps fellows partnership at George Washington University.

  • There is a wide variety of careers that students go into when they graduate.

  • They go into NGO non-profit, they go into the for-profit sector with multinationals. We have a student now with Exxon-Mobil.

  • Weve had students working with NGOs such as Chemonics, Axion,

  • International Development Fund, World Bank, and Habitat for Humanity.

  • If the program suits your needs, if it does draw to your interests,

  • I would say it's probably one of the best opportunities that are out there

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