A Fulbright Recipient Finds Her VoiceâAnd Her Way
91´ŤĂ˝ alumna and current graduate student Sophie Bergan (BA â24) is living the dream as an English teaching assistant in Madrid, but she wasnât always the adaptable, confident person she is now.
It all began with a little voice.
In the beginning, it wasnât encouraging. It told her that her dreamâearning one of the most prestigious scholarships in the worldâmight be too big, too out of reach.
But, after Sophie Bergan got a taste of international travel as an undergrad, the little voice changed its tune.
âThat little voice in the back of my head that always thought about Fulbright was like, âWell, you could just try and throw together an application,ââ she says.
Bergan did much more than âthrow togetherâ her Fulbright Program application. Her hard work during the process earned her a position as an English teaching assistant at a high school in Madrid, Spainâa prestigious placement.
Now, Bergan lives an enviable life in Spainâs capital city, splitting time between teaching English as a second language to 12- to 15-year-olds, jogging around local parks with a running club of fellow expats and finding the best pastries and coffee the city has to offer.
But her journey to Madrid was windingâand required some self-reflection.
From Type A to âpersonalidad tipo Aâ
Bergan, from Ankeny, Iowa, was a high-achieving high school student who carried her Type A traits into college at the Korbel School of International Studiesânot only majoring in international studies with a concentration in global health and development, but also minoring in Spanish, leadership studies and sustainability.
During her first two years at 91´ŤĂ˝, she remained snugly inside her comfort zoneâa driven, ambitious comfort zone, for sure, but a comfort zone no less. While being goal-oriented and always striving for perfection had always worked for her, Bergan wanted something more.
âI did things to check boxes for sure, but I didn't really feel like I was investing myself in anything,â Bergan reflects.
All of that changed when she went abroad her junior yearâto Alicante, Spain, and Quito, Ecuador. Bergan says living with host families and speaking mostly Spanish disrupted her routine, jolting her worldview and opening her eyes to new opportunities for growth. It allowed her to consider letting go of what she previously thought her life should look like.
âYou really realize how big the world is,â she says. âShifting my one-track vision for my life led me to make new friends and learn a new language and immerse myself in a new culture. I guess that year really showed me how capable I was.â
Berganâs transformative time abroadâand that little voice in her headâspurred her to apply for Fulbright.
Dedication to the process
For the Fulbright application process, Bergan says she completed between 20 and 30 drafts of the same essay while she was an undergrad.
âIt became my life,â she says. âI lived inside my application; I was obsessed with the process.â
In her first attempt, Bergan wrote what she thought Fulbright would want to hearâbut felt like she wasnât being true to herself.Ěý
Thanks to coaching from the staff at 91´ŤĂ˝âs Office of Scholar Development and Fellowship Advising, Bergan was able to refine her writing and find her voice. She eventually crafted a nontraditional personal statement that took the form of a culinary recipeâan homage to her love of cooking and her goal of helping transform global food systems to mitigate climate change and improve human health.
âRepresenting myself by talking about food couldn't have been more âme,ââ she says, reflecting on her motivations. âI thought, Fulbright might not really like this, but I love it, and so this is what I'm going to submitâand it worked out.â
That raw honesty is what Bergan believes landed her the Fulbright position, and she wants other Fulbright hopefuls to take heed of her advice: âItâs super clichĂŠ, but be authentic in your application,â she says.
Each day is an opportunity
Fast forward to todayâBergan is living life to the fullest in Madrid and pursuing a masterâs degree from 91´ŤĂ˝ in Global Environmental Sustainability, with a certificate in Global Health Affairs.
Her life in Spain is a privilege, Bergan says. She says she sees each day as an opportunity to put herself in new situations, even if theyâre daunting.
âI'm living here and doing great. I've made friends, and I've built a life for myself, and so I think it's just shown me that even when I'm walking into the unknown or walking into something that is just so unfamiliar, I have built enough trust in myself to know that I can handle it,â she reflects. âI will find my way and it will be okay.â
So, whether sheâs leading her schoolâs Model United Nations program, traveling to Rome to run a half marathon or walking among peacocks in Madridâs Retiro Park, just knowâSophie Bergan is finally comfortable with being uncomfortable.
Anyone interested in competing for the Fulbright U.S. Student Program or other nationally or internationally competitive awards can work with 91´ŤĂ˝âs new .