Patricia Aguilar links U.S. with El Salvador
She leads English Language Learning Programs there
A U.S. Embassy isn鈥檛 just a place where you seek help after losing a passport or when a family member gets in a legal scrape overseas. The embassy also promotes cultural exchanges between the U.S. and other nations. This is the work Patricia Aguilar, MA 鈥93, does at the U.S. Embassy in El Salvador.
She leads the English Language Learning Programs, which provide opportunities for Salvadorians to teach in the U.S., learn English and explore American culture. She also promotes professional development programs for English teachers at all levels, sponsored by the U.S. Department of State, and runs the Inter-national Exchange Alumni Community for past participants in U.S. government-sponsored exchange programs.
Cultural and educational exchanges work in two directions: American graduate students and specialists are hosted at universities in El Salvador, and high school students and adults from the Central American nation can take part in several programs like English Access, Youth Ambassadors, Global UGRAD and Fulbright.
鈥淏efore working in public diplomacy, I was an English teacher and interpreter for international organizations,鈥 says Aguilar, who was a Fulbright scholar at Binghamton, where she earned her master鈥檚 degree in comparative literature. 鈥淚 worked for USAID [international development agency] in education programs, and I was the translator for the public affairs office here at the embassy.
鈥満诹鲜悠 helped me in my personal and professional life. I was connected to research opportunities that were tremendous. And I came away with a great network of contacts and friends for life. I still keep in touch with people whom I met my first day at Binghamton.鈥