Samira Pardanani
Associate Vice President, Student Services and International Education, Shoreline Community College
My NAFSA Story Began in 1995 when I was finishing grad school at Bowling Green State University. I had been interning in the international services department and was invited to attend a conference that everyone seemed very excited about.
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NAFSA’s first office in Washington, D.C., from 1966–1991.
Left to right: NAFSA members David Rockefeller, Forrest Moore,
Howard Cole, and Jane Cecil gather at the 11th annual conference in New York
City in 1959. Photo courtesy of NAFSA Archives
President John F. Kennedy signs the Mutual Educational and Cultural
Exchange Act (Fulbright-Hays Act) on September 21, 1961. Photo courtesy of the
John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston, Massachusetts.
NAFSA celebrated its 30th anniversary at the 1978 conference in
Ames, Iowa. Photo courtesy NAFSA Archives.
Entertainment at the 1987 conference in Long Beach, California.
Photo courtesy NAFSA Archives.
The cover of the first International Educator
magazine. Photo courtesy NAFSA Archives.
Sen. Paul Simon, speaking at the NAFSA conference in 1995. Photo
courtesy NAFSA Archives.
The 2015 NAFSA Annual Conference & Expo in Boston, Massachusetts.
Photo courtesy NAFSA Archives.
NAFSAns gather in Denver, Colorado, in 2022 for the first in-person
conference since the pandemic began. Photo courtesy NAFSA Archives.