Last spring, Callie Collins, then a fourth-year student at the University of Virginia, was awarded a Fulbright U.S. Student Award, the culmination of four years spent studying new cultures and languages. The good news, however, arrived in a changed world: COVID-19 sent Collins home for her last semester and put her Fulbright plans on hold.
“It still doesn’t really feel real, for a number of reasons,” said Collins, a double-major in Spanish and anthropology. “Every interaction I’ve had with fellow grantees and administration has been virtual, and to be honest, everything feels weird and unreal.
“Right now, we’re scheduled to go in September 2021,” said Collins, who is slated to be an English teaching assistant in Russia. “All the delays have been really jarring and made life really uncertain and stressful. My short- and long-term plans keep getting pushed further back or changing altogether.”
Full immersion, overseas programs such as the Fulbright awards, have suffered in the world-wide pandemic, as have the recipients of these awards. Some students have had to give up their dreams, while others have deferred theirs.