Taylor Lenze offered two Fulbright Scholarships

July 26, 2016

Recent graduate Taylor Lenze聽will travel to Austria this fall on a Fulbright Scholarship.

Taylor Lenze is a young, white woman with long, light brown hair and rectangular glasses. She is smiling at the camera.
Taylor Lenze is a young, white woman with long, light brown hair and rectangular glasses. She is smiling at the camera.
Taylor Lenze

When in elementary school, Taylor Lenze became intrigued by the German language.

To her, it was something different鈥攎ost of her classmates wanted to learn Spanish. Lenze said she liked the way German words were pronounced.

鈥淚t was the language that sounded the coolest,鈥 said Lenze. 鈥淚 was so into it that my dad bought me a German picture book that we鈥檇 read at home.鈥

She enjoyed learning about the German language and culture, but said she didn鈥檛 think about traveling there until college.

鈥淏efore that, I鈥檇 been to Canada and Pennsylvania. I didn鈥檛 realize that it would be possible for me to travel much, especially internationally,鈥 Lenze said.

While at UM-Dearborn, she had professors鈥攏amely Lecturer Liana McMillian and Professor Jackie Vansant鈥攚ho encouraged her to gain educational experiences abroad.

And when Lenze shared that she didn鈥檛 think it was financially feasible, they also introduced her to applying for traveling scholarships and grants.

鈥淭hey changed my life. Until then, I had no idea that there were so many possibilities out there for me,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 thought travel was for wealthy people to go on cruises. It didn鈥檛 cross my mind that you could travel for education and research and there was financial help out there for you to do it.鈥

And that encouragement led to Lenze landing not one, but two Fulbright Scholarships.

The 2016 CASL graduate, who majored in English and minored in German, was offered English Teaching Assistant (ETA) program grants in high school-level equivalent classrooms, one in Germany and another in Austria.

鈥淭aylor is an ideal candidate for the teaching assistantship position and it is not at all surprising that she received offers to work as a teaching assistant in both Germany and Austria,鈥 said Vansant, who has known Lenze since Lenze鈥檚 first year on campus. 鈥淪he has been well prepared through her course work at UM-D and shown how well she can work with students as a tutor in the language lab. Taylor is creative, flexible, open to new cultures, and eager to share information about her own culture.鈥

Lenze said she chose to take the ETA position in Vienna, Austria, because of Vansant鈥檚 stories of the location and a previous experience with the German-speaking city.

鈥淚 only stopped for a weekend on my way from Hungary to Germany, but I immediately fell in love with Vienna,鈥 said Lenze, who traveled to Germany on a previous educational grant. 鈥淚 saw why Jackie (Vansant) spends so much time there. When I walked around the city, they have book carts all over! In the center of town, there鈥檚 a free opera broadcast and there are museums everywhere. To me, it was magical鈥 a magical place where I could speak in German.鈥

Leaving in September for her new adventure, Lenze will be in Vienna for nearly a year. She said she will miss her family and friends, but is looking forward to this new chapter in her life.

鈥淕rowing up I wanted to be an English teacher. I just happened to fall in love with the German language,鈥 Lenze said. 鈥淣ow I get to teach English, use German and be in an enchanting place. It鈥檚 what I went to school for鈥攁nd it鈥檚 all come together so perfectly.鈥