Adelphi University

07/07/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/07/2026 08:40

Global Leadership in Action: Two New 2026 Grads Head to Europe on Fulbright Fellowships

Published: July 7, 2026
by Leanne Potts
Julia Carpio '25, MA '26, is a graduate of Adelphi's accelerated five-year Scholar Teacher Education Program; Hussein Ali Rifath '26 earned degrees in political science and Spanish.

May graduates Julia Carpio and Hussein Ali Rifath are jump starting their careers with Fulbright English Teaching Assistant fellowships that will place them in front of classrooms in Greece and Spain.

As members of Adelphi's Class of 2026 are taking their first steps into their after-college lives, two new graduates are readying for a year abroad on prestigious and highly competitive Fulbright English Teaching Assistant fellowships. This year's recipients-Julia Carpio, a graduate of Adelphi's accelerated five-year Scholar Teacher Education Program, and Hussein Ali Rifath, who earned bachelor's degrees in political science and Spanish-will be going to Europe to teach, mentor and build cross-cultural understanding.

The two award winners embody Adelphi's commitment to scholarship, service and global citizenship. They also reflect the University's commitment to helping students gain access to experiences that transform lives. Both worked with Adelphi's Office of Prestigious Awards and Fellowships to navigate the application process, secure effective letters of recommendation and prepare for interviews.

"Our office was delighted to work with these Fulbright awardees," said Nicole Rudolph, PhD, director of the Office of Prestigious Awards and Fellowships and associate dean for student engagement. "Each brought a true passion for international education and global connection to the application process, and we are so pleased that the U.S. Fulbright Committee recognized their potential by granting them English Teaching Assistantships."

Applying for the fellowship can be just as valuable as receiving one, according to Dean Rudolph. "Applying for a nationally competitive award is a wonderful way for students to think deeply about their objectives, priorities and values," she said. "Students tell us that the application process itself helped them to clarify their life goals, improve their written and oral communication, and refine their time management skills."

Julia Carpio's Leap to Greece

For Julia Carpio '25, MA '26, who received her MA in Childhood Education and Advanced Certificate in TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) in May, winning a prestigious Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship award was the culmination of a lifelong dream.

A self-described "shy, quiet and reserved" child, Carpio first found her path to teaching thanks to a kindergarten teacher who made her feel like she could achieve anything. Combined with the inspiration of her mother, a high school Spanish teacher, education was in Carpio's blood. "Our (Adelphi) professors tell us all the time that teaching is a calling, it's not a job-you have to have a true passion for it," she said.

That calling will soon take her to an elementary school in Athens, Greece, where she'll spend a year teaching English to students. The Fulbright program's focus on multilingual education and cultural exchange matched the path she was already on. "I really wanted to dive into teaching and get as much as I could out of multilingual education," she said.

Carpio can point to specific moments-and people-who nudged her from dream to decision. One was a study abroad program in Norway, led by Mary Jean McCarthy, clinical associate professor in the Ruth S. Ammon College of Education and Health Sciences. "That was where I fell in love with multilingual education and learning from educators from different parts of the world," she recalled.

McCarthy connected Carpio with Professor Clara Vaz Bauler, PhD, professor in the School of Education who became an anchor for her Fulbright ambitions. Daryl M. Gordon, PhD, who is also a professor in the School of Education, and Priya Wadhera, PhD, professor and interim director of the Office of Prestigious Awards and Fellowships last year, helped with her application. Shannon Harrison, director of Adelphi's Center for International Education, first mentioned Fulbright to Carpio and walked her through options for teaching abroad. "So many people helped me get here," Carpio said.

She chose Greece deliberately. Many Fulbright placements only put scholars in schools part time, but the Athens program puts Carpio in the classroom five days a week and some Saturdays. "I want to be 100 percent part of the staff," she explained.

Carpio's hopes for the year abroad are practical. "I want to walk away as a more effective educator," she said. She wants to watch how Greek teachers structure lessons, what questions they ask, how they respond to multilingual students-and then carry those insights into whatever classroom she steps into next.

Long term, she sees Fulbright as the first in a series of international chapters in her life. She wants to keep teaching abroad and eventually pursue a PhD in international and comparative education.

Hussein Ali Rifath: Making a Difference in Madrid

By the time Hussein Ali Rifath '26 learned he'd been selected for a Fulbright, he'd spent four years at Adelphi growing into the kind of person who sees scholarship as service.

"It's been a journey of growth for me," said Rifath, who served as president of the Class of 2026 and president of Adelphi's Student Government Association. This fall, he will travel to Spain to help public school students sharpen their English, engage with global issues and see America in a new light.

"We're being citizen diplomats," he says of himself and his fellow Fulbright recipients. "We're not just working as educators; we're advancing our foreign relations abroad."

For Rifath, his Fulbright sits at the intersection of everything that's been on his mind as he graduates: America's role in the world, the power of education and a personal desire to serve.

"I feel like now, more than ever, it's important for Americans to get involved," he said.

He's especially aware that many students abroad only know the United States through politics and headlines. His goal is "to give a nuanced view, to show that we have two sides to our political spectrum, like every country. I want to give people a more comprehensive message about what America is, what we stand for. I want them to see us as a vibrant, welcoming society that not only cherishes them but also cherishes the human bonds which unite us across the world."

In Madrid, Rifath will work with two programs that bring global awareness into local schools. "I'll help students articulate themselves in English and speak about pressing issues across the world-like climate change and international relations," he explained.

Rifath credits two Adelphi faculty members with helping him win a Fulbright: Ignacio Arellano-Torres, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures, and Dr. Vaz Bauler, the education professor who also inspired Julia Carpio. "They helped me discover my passion for learning language," he said.

Fulbright is just one chapter in Rifath's plan for a life centered on service. "Long term, I see myself joining the military," he says, which he sees as a way to serve his community and country. "Through it all, my goal is to get involved in ways that benefit the community."

Adelphi University published this content on July 07, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on July 07, 2026 at 14:40 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]