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< Back to current issue of Immigration Daily <Back to current issue of Immigrant's Weekly
[Federal Register: October 24, 2000 (Volume 65, Number 206)]
[Notices]
[Page 63668-63672]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr24oc00-114]
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DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice 3454]
Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs Request for Proposals;
Fulbright Student Program
NOTICE: Request for Proposals.
SUMMARY: The Office of Academic Programs of the United States
Department of State's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
announces an open competition for one or more assistance award(s).
Public and private non-profit organizations meeting the provisions
described in IRS regulation 26 CFR 1.501(c) may submit proposals to
provide administrative and program services for the Fulbright Student
Program in Fiscal Year 2002. Pursuant to its grants guidelines
established cooperatively with the Congress, ``The Bureau seeks to
promote competition and balance in its discretionary grant-making and
strives to avoid exclusivity.'' The Bureau is competing the
administrative functions that support the Fulbright Student Program for
the first time in the fifty-five year history of the Program. Deadline
for receipt of proposals is February 1, 2001. The cooperative
agreement(s) will begin o/a October 1, 2001, pending appropriation of
funds.
Program Information
Overview: The Fulbright Program was created by the U.S. Congress at
the end of World War II to exchange U.S. and foreign students, scholars
and teachers, providing them with the opportunity to experience
firsthand the political, economic and cultural institutions and
societies in each other's countries. In the intervening years, the
Fulbright Program has evolved into the premier educational exchange
program sponsored by the people of the United States through their
federal government, and thus an important element in the conduct of
U.S. foreign affairs. The Fulbright Program, which now extends to
approximately 140 foreign countries and involves 5,000 participants
overall every year, has helped to form and inform tens of thousands of
the world's leaders in every academic and professional field. The
student portion of the Fulbright Program will engage approximately 875
U.S. and 2,700 foreign students in FY 2002.
The hallmark of the Fulbright Program is binationalism. The United
States and foreign governments, educational and other public and
private institutions are all partners in this exchange. In many
countries of the world, financial contributions from governments or
public/private sources match or exceed those of the United States.
Because of its binational nature, the profile of the Fulbright Program
worldwide reflects a range of objectives and interests.
The Fulbright Program's grant-making authority is contained in the
Mutual Educational and Cultural Exchange Act of 1961, Public Law 87-
256, as amended, also known as the Fulbright-Hays Act. The purpose of
the Act is ``to enable the Government of the United States to increase
mutual understanding between the people of the United States and the
people of other countries * * *; to strengthen the ties which unite us
with other nations by demonstrating the educational and cultural
interests, developments, and achievements of the people of the United
States and other nations * * * and thus to assist in the development of
friendly, sympathetic and peaceful relations between the United States
and the other countries of the world.'' The Fulbright Program is funded
through annual Congressional appropriations to the Department of State
and receives significant financial support from partner governments and
private donors worldwide.
Fulbright Student Program
For more than fifty-five years, the Fulbright Student Program has
offered grants to college and university graduates as well as to
creative artists to study and conduct research abroad and in the United
States. In the creative and performing arts, applicants must have
completed four years of professional study and/or experience. Tens of
thousands of U.S. and foreign students have participated in the program
since its inception. In FY 2002, the Fulbright Student Program will
send abroad approximately 875 U.S. students and artists to study and
conduct research and will bring to this country approximately 1,500 new
foreign students for similar activities. Additionally, in FY 2002, the
grants to 1,200 foreign students from prior years will be renewed.
Applicants for this award(s) should submit program proposals and budget
projections for new students only. Prior year grants will be
administered by the organizations currently administering the program.
Responsibility for the management of the Fulbright Student Program
is currently shared among the Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs of the U.S. Department of State in Washington, bilateral
Fulbright Commissions in 51 countries and public affairs sections of
U.S. embassies overseas, and cooperating private sector agencies in the
United States. Overall policy guidelines for all Fulbright programs are
determined by the Presidentially-appointed J. William Fulbright Foreign
Scholarship Board (FSB).
Because the Fulbright Student Program is both global and binational
in nature, its administration is programmatically and administratively
complex. It must accommodate a variety of circumstances in every
geographic region of the world and be responsive to and supportive of
many different constituencies in the United States and abroad, each
with its own sets of goals and concerns. The integrity of the Program
requires that it maintain the highest and most consistent standards of
academic and professional quality in the selection of candidates and
implementation of projects. While the Program is active in some 140
countries, it is important that it maintain a single worldwide
identity.
Under the FSB's auspices, U.S. citizens are awarded grants each
year, through a merit-based, competitive process, to study and
undertake research at universities or research institutions abroad.
Grant opportunities for U.S. students are determined overseas by
binational Fulbright
[[Page 63669]]
Commissions and U.S. embassies in coordination with the Bureau of
Educational and Cultural Affairs in Washington.
Similarly, foreign students receive grants each year for study and
individual research in the U.S. Grantees for this program are nominated
through open, merit-based competitions in each participating country,
conducted by a binational Fulbright Commission or, in the absence of a
Commission, by U.S. embassies.
Eligibility Guidelines
Public and private non-profit organizations with at least four
years of experience in conducting international exchange programs and
meeting the provisions described in IRS regulation 26 CFR 1.501(c) may
apply to provide administrative and program services for the Fulbright
Student Program in Fiscal Year 2002.
Options
Organizations or consortia of organizations may compete to
administer the entire world-wide Fulbright Student Program, comprising
both the U.S. and foreign student components.
Alternatively, single organizations or consortia of organizations
may compete to administer the U.S. student program and/or the foreign
student program based on the following guidelines:
For the U.S. Student Fulbright Program, the Competition Is Open To
--single organizations or consortia of organizations wishing to
administer the program worldwide.
For the Foreign Student Fulbright Program, the Competition Is Open
To
--single organizations or consortia of organizations wishing to
administer the program worldwide or;
--single organizations wishing to administer the foreign student
program for one or more regions of the world. For the purpose of this
competition, regions are defined as follows:
--Western Hemisphere [Latin America, the Caribbean and Canada];
--Sub-Saharan Africa;
--Europe, [West, Central and East Europe including Greece, Turkey and
Cyprus] ;
--North Africa and the Middle East;
--South Asia;
--Far East and Pacific.
Organizations may submit proposals to administer the worldwide U.S.
student program and the foreign student program in one or more regions.
The Bureau will not accept proposals to administer the Foreign Student
Fulbright Program in a single country or group of countries other than
those in the defined regions. A complete list of countries and country
programs in each region is provided in the Project Objectives, Goals
and Implementation (POGI) package.
At the present time, the Bureau does not administer a Foreign
Student Fulbright Program for the Newly Independent States.
Consortia wishing to administer the worldwide Fulbright Student
Program (U.S. and foreign), the U.S. student program or the worldwide
foreign student program should designate one organization to be the
recipient of the cooperative agreement award. Applications proposing
administration of the Program by a consortium should provide a detailed
description of arrangements for cooperative work among the partners and
between the partners and the U.S. and overseas academic communities,
bilateral commissions and other entities responsible for the Fulbright
Program.
The Bureau reserves the right to reduce, revise, or increase
proposal budgets in accordance with the needs of the program and
availability of funds. In addition, it reserves the right to accept
proposals in whole or in part and make an award or awards in accordance
with what serves the best interest of the Fulbright Student Program.
Awards made will be subject to periodic reporting and evaluation
requirements.
Application Guidelines
The Bureau will work closely with the recipient(s) of the
cooperative agreement award(s) and will maintain a regular dialogue on
administrative issues and questions as they arise over the duration of
the award. Contingent upon satisfactory performance based on annual
reviews, the Bureau intends to renew the award(s) each year for a
period of not less than four additional years. The Bureau reserves the
right to renew the award(s) beyond that period.
Depending on the Bureau's final decision on who will receive the
award(s), the recipient(s) of the cooperative agreement award(s) will
be singly or jointly responsible, under Bureau supervision, for the
following activities beginning October 1, 2001.
For U.S. Students
Program Planning and Management: The award recipient(s) will be
responsible for recruitment of U.S. students; tracking and monitoring
of grantees; maintenance of a data base on grantees; administration of
a central fund used to augment the number of graduating seniors and
graduate students taking part in the program; preparation of
statistical reports on distribution of grants by region, degree
objective and source of funding. Proposals should offer strategies for
recruitment of U.S. students and plans to enhance the visibility of the
program and may include other innovative activities.
Publicity and Applications: The recipient(s) of the cooperative
agreement award will be responsible for preparation and distribution of
an ``awards booklet'' announcing grant opportunities, application
packets and general program announcements, an annual directory of
student grantees and flyers to publicize the program in the U.S.
Proposals should address written and electronic communication,
professional networking and other means, which will be used to enhance
recruitment efforts. Suggested procedures should take into account the
Bureau's plan to implement interactive electronic applications to the
fullest possible extent. The award recipient(s) will be responsible for
establishing and maintaining a website for the U.S. student program
with appropriate links to the Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs' website and websites of binational Fulbright commissions
overseas. Publicity and outreach efforts should include emphasis on
recruitment of those groups currently under represented in the
Fulbright Program, including people with disabilities and racial and
ethnic minorities.
Screening and Selection Process: The recipient(s) of the
cooperative agreement award will provide application forms and accept
completed applications, both written and electronic, from U.S. program
applicants; provide appropriate notification to applicants of their
status on an on-going basis; pre-screen for eligibility all U.S.
applicants; convene review committees composed of area and subject
experts to screen U.S. applications to determine which among them will
be recommended to U.S. embassies and Fulbright Commissions overseas and
to the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board.
Post-Nomination Services: The award recipient(s) will prepare
letters for the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board
informing successful candidates of their selection; prepare letters for
all candidates not selected or in alternate status; prepare grant award
packages for candidates going to countries where the program is
administered by U.S. embassies and to certain commission countries;
respond to queries from grantees; prepare Congressional
[[Page 63670]]
notification letters for all U.S. candidates awarded grants; assist
with pre-departure orientation for grantees going to China, Africa, the
NIS, Southern Europe and the Baltics and other countries as required;
maintain data on participants; prepare special reports at the request
of the Bureau; review medical forms and identify health problems;
electronically enroll some grantees in Bureau-provided health
insurance; monitor grantees and provide grantee reports and analysis of
these reports to the Bureau; prepare recognition certificates for all
grantees; and assist with emergencies.
Fiscal Management: The award recipient(s) will manage payments of
grantee stipends; provide quarterly reports on actual and projected
expenditures; provide statistical, insurance, and other as hoc periodic
reports; and monitor and audit internal functions and systems in
accordance with U.S. Government and Bureau guidelines.
For Foreign Students
Program Planning and Management: The award recipient(s) will be
responsible for placement of foreign students at U.S. institutions
(note that some students are self-placed); development of U.S.
university support in the form of tuition waivers or waivers of other
academic fees; reviewing and making recommendations on grantee
allowances; maintaining data base on grantee information, providing
estimated costs for grants including tuition, meals and expenses,
testing, pre-academic programs, cultural allowances and return travel;
and preparation of special reports on the composition of the foreign
student applicant pool. Proposals should offer strategies for placement
and plans to enhance the visibility of the foreign student program and
may include other innovative activities. Organizations or consortia
should describe overseas capacities to assist U.S. embassies and
Fulbright Commission with publicity, recruitment and selection of
candidates for their foreign student program. These organizations or
consortia should also address their regional, exchange or other kinds
of expertise which would contribute to administration of the program.
Selection: The award recipient(s) will be responsible for
preparation and distribution of application materials and selection
guidelines to U.S. embassies and Fulbright commissions; receipt and
review of applications; distributing testing materials and arranging
special testing as necessary; and preparation of grantee handbook and
orientation material.
English Language and Pre-Academic Training: The award recipient(s)
will be responsible for designing criteria and projecting costs for
programs of English language upgrading and discipline-specific
preparation for selected Fulbright students as required for their
academic program of study; evaluating credentials, placement and
supervision of students in these English language and pre-academic
programs; and evaluating and monitoring programs.
Placement: The award recipient(s) will maintain and develop
resources to ensure the best placement of students; maintain contact
with U.S. universities and knowledge of universities' current
capacities; specializations and admission requirements; evaluate
applications to determine to which U.S. universities they should be
submitted; submit applications to an adequate number of institutions to
ensure appropriate placement; secure cost-sharing; receive application
admissions and rejections, analyze data and forward recommendations to
embassies/commissions; and confirm placement at U.S. institutions for
self-placed grantees.
Supervision and Support: The award recipient(s) will be responsible
for preparation of grant packages for grantees from non-commission and
some commission countries; review of medical forms; electronically
enrolling some grantees in Bureau-provided health insurance; monitoring
and preparation of grantee reports; verification, monitoring and
maintaining students' correct visa status; verifying grantee enrollment
in approved academic programs and monitoring performance; reviewing
requests for renewal and extension of grants; and assisting with
emergency situations.
Enrichment Activities: Each year, a series of enrichment seminars
is held for foreign Fulbright students across the U.S. It is the goal
of the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs to include all first-
year foreign Fulbright students in one of these seminars. The goal of
these seminars is to provide participating foreign students with an in-
depth understanding of American institutions, society and culture.
Organizations bidding to administer the foreign student program in two
or more regions should demonstrate the capacity to organize and manage
at least six substantive three-day regional seminars annually.
Fiscal Management: The award recipient(s) will manage grantee
stipend payments, including tax withholding for foreign grantees from
non-commission and certain commission countries; provide quarterly
reports on actual and projected expenditures; provide statistical,
insurance and other ad hoc periodic reports; and monitor and audit
internal functions and systems in accordance with U.S. Government and
Bureau guidelines.
Budget Guidelines
A comprehensive line item administrative budget must be submitted
with the proposal. It is anticipated that funding for the cooperative
agreement award(s) which include program administration for all new
Fulbright students will be approximately $7.5 million. In addition, a
program budget totaling approximately $40 million for the global
Fulbright Student Program will be transferred to the recipient(s) of
the award in quarterly installments. Organizations/consortia submitting
proposals to administer the worldwide U.S. student program and/or the
foreign student program should submit budgets to support new students
only. The current cooperative agreement awardees will continue to
monitor and provide support for FY 2001 and earlier grantees.
Proposals must project a unit cost per U.S. and foreign student for
each world region, provide a budget total by world region and document
the percentage of time and cost per position for each staff member
working on the Fulbright Student Program. Further budget guidance is
contained in the Project Objective, Goals and Implementation (POGI)
document.
Organizations competing for all or part of the Fulbright foreign
student program should refer to the POGI for projected student
caseloads for each geographic area.
Announcement Title and Number
All communications with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs, U.S. Department of State concerning this RFP should refer to
the announcement's title and reference number ECA/A/E-02-01.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT: Dr. Ellen S. Berelson, Office of
Academic Exchange Programs, ECA/A/E/AF, Room 232, Bureau of Educational
and Cultural Affairs, United States Department of State, 301 4th
Street, SW., SA-44, Washington, DC 20547, phone: (202) 619-5376, fax:
(202) 619-6137; E-mail: eberelson@pd.state.gov to request a
Solicitation Package, containing more detailed information. The package
will include all required application forms, standard guidelines for
preparing a proposal, including
[[Page 63671]]
specific criteria for preparation of the proposal budget.
All inquiries about the Request for Proposal or any aspect of the
Fulbright Student Program should be submitted in writing to Dr.
Berelson. Interested applicants should read the complete Federal
Register announcement before sending inquiries or submitting proposals.
Any questions or requests for information that applicants wish to
make to overseas Fulbright Commissions or Public Affairs Sections at
U.S. embassies also should be submitted in writing to Dr. Berelson for
transmission to those overseas offices.
To Download a Solicitation Package Via Internet
The entire Solicitation Package may be downloaded from the Bureau's
website at http://exchanges.state.gov/education/rfps. Please read all
information before downloading.
Deadline for Proposals
All proposal copies must be received at the Bureau of Educational
and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State by 5 p.m. Washington,
D.C. time on February 1, 2001. Faxed document will not be accepted.
Documents postmarked with the due date but received on a later date
will not be accepted. Each applicant must ensure that the proposals are
received by the above deadline.
Applicants must follow all instructions in the Solicitation
Package. The original and 15 copies of the application should be sent
to:
U.S. Department of State, SA-44, Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs, Reference: ECA/A/E-01-02, Program Management, ECA/EX/PM,
Room 536, 301 4th Street, SW., Washington, DC 20547.
Applicants must also submit the ``Executive Summary'' and
``Proposal Narrative'' sections of the proposal on a 3.5" diskette,
formatted for DOS. These documents must be provided in ASCII text (DOS)
format with a maximum line length of 65 characters. The Bureau may
transmit these files electronically to American embassies for their
review, with the goal of reducing the time it takes to receive field
comments for the Bureau's grant review process.
Diversity, Freedom and Democracy Guidelines
Pursuant to the Bureau's authorizing legislation, programs must
maintain a non-political character and should be balanced and
representative of the diversity of American political, social, and
cultural life. ``Diversity'' should be interpreted in the broadest
sense and encompass differences including, but not limited to
ethnicity, race, gender, religion, geographic location, socio-economic
status and physical challenges. Applicants are strongly encouraged to
adhere to the advancement of this principle both in program
administration and in program content including recruitment and
placement of students and selection of grantees for enrichment
activities. Please refer to the review criteria under the ``Support for
Diversity'' section for specific suggestions on incorporating diversity
into the total proposal.
Public Law 104-319 provides that ``in carrying out programs of
educational and cultural exchange in countries whose people do not
fully enjoy freedom and democracy, `the Bureau' shall take appropriate
steps to provide opportunities for participation in such programs to
human rights and democracy leaders of such countries.'' Public Law 106-
113 requires that governments of the countries described above do not
have inappropriate influence in the selection process. Proposals should
reflect advancement of these goals in their proposal contents, to the
full extent deemed feasible.
Applicants should provide a diversity plan indicating how their
proposal will serve to increase the number of U.S. Fulbright student
grantees from under represented communities, as listed above. In
addition, the plan should include ways the applicant will build
diversity into administrative and programmatic aspects of the program--
in the composition of screening/review committee members, in foreign
student grantee placement, through orientation, enrichment and
enhancement programs for U.S. and foreign Fulbright students, and in
developing and implementing website and other online resources. The
applicant may wish to designate a ``diversity coordinator'' among the
proposed program staff.
Review Process
The Bureau will acknowledge receipt of all proposals and will
review them first for technical eligibility. Proposals must conform to
Bureau requirements and guidelines outlined in the Solicitation
Package. Proposals will be deemed ineligible if they do not fully
adhere to the guidelines established herein and in the solicitation
package. Eligible proposals will undergo further advisory professional
review at the Department of State which may include the use of advisory
external consultants. Proposals may be reviewed by the Office of the
Legal Advisor or by other Department elements. Final funding decisions
are at the discretion of the Assistant Secretary of State for
Educational and Cultural Affairs. All programs and activities are
subject to the availability of funds. Final technical authority for
assistance awards resides with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs grants division.
Review Criteria
Technically eligible applications will be competitively reviewed
according to the criteria stated below. These criteria are not rank-
ordered.
1. Quality: Proposals should display an understanding of and
respect for the goals and distinguished traditions of the Fulbright
Program, as reflected in the requirements and priorities of this RFP.
Proposals should demonstrate a commitment to excellence and creativity
in the implementation and management of the program, including the
recruitment of students.
2. Program Planning: Proposals should respond to the planning
requirements outlined in the RFP. Planning should demonstrate
substantive rigor. A detailed agenda and work plan, including a time
line, should demonstrate feasibility and the applicant's logistical
capacity to implement the Program.
3. Ability to Achieve Program Objectives: Proposals should
demonstrate clearly how the applicant will fulfill the Program's
objectives and implement plans, while demonstrating innovation and a
commitment to academic excellence. Proposals should demonstrate a
capacity for flexibility in the management of the Program.
4. Institutional Capacity: Proposed personnel and institutional
resources should be adequate and appropriate to achieve Program goals.
Applicants should demonstrate established links to institutions of
higher education in the U.S. and knowledge of the overseas educational
environment, particularly an awareness of conditions in societies and
educational institutions outside the United States as they apply to
academic exchange programs. Applicants should demonstrate prior
experience or the capacity to negotiate significant cost savings for
foreign students from American institutions of higher education.
Applicants should also demonstrate their capacity to provide an
information management/database system that meets Program requirements,
is compatible with the Bureau's systems and will advance the Fulbright
Student Program's plan for implementing electronic applications and
data storage.
5. Institutional Performance: Proposals should demonstrate an
institutional record of managing
[[Page 63672]]
successful exchange programs including: significant experience in
developing and administering international exchange programs, sound
fiscal management, and full compliance with all reporting requirements
for past Bureau cooperative agreement awards as determined by the
Bureau's Grants Division. In its review of proposals, the Bureau will
consider the past performance of prior recipients and the demonstrated
potential of new applicants.
6. Cost-effectiveness: Overhead and administrative components
including salaries should be kept as low as possible while adequate and
appropriate to provide the required services. Proposals should document
plans to realize cost-savings and other efficiencies through use of
technology, administrative streamlining and other management
techniques.
7. Cost-sharing: Proposals should demonstrate maximum cost-sharing.
Preference will be given to proposals which demonstrate innovative
approaches to leveraging of funds, fund-raising and other sharing of
costs.
8. Support of Diversity: Proposals should demonstrate the
applicant's awareness and understanding of diversity and a commitment
to its achievement through individual grant awards and institutional
participation and in other ways in both administrative and programmatic
aspects of the Fulbright program.
9. Evaluation: Proposals should include a plan to evaluate the
success of the Program. The Bureau recommends that proposals include a
draft survey questionnaire or other techniques plus description of a
methodology to use to link outcomes to original project objectives.
Notice
The terms and conditions published in this RFP are binding and may
not be modified by any Bureau representative. Explanatory information
provided by the Bureau that contradicts published language will not be
binding. Issuance of the RFP does not constitute an award commitment on
the part of the Government. The Bureau reserves the right to accept
proposals in whole or in part and make an award or awards in accordance
with what best serves the interests of the global Fulbright Student
Program. The Bureau also reserves the right to reduce, revise, or
increase proposal budgets in accordance with the needs of the program
and the availability of funds. Awards made will be subject to periodic
reporting and evaluation requirements. Programs must comply with J-1
visa regulations. Please refer to the Solicitation Package for further
information.
Notification
Final awards cannot be made until funds have been appropriated by
Congress, allocated and committed through internal Department of State
procedures.
Dated: October 18, 2000.
William B. Bader,
Assistant Secretary for Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S.
Department of State.
[FR Doc. 00-27292 Filed 10-23-00; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710-05-U
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