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Nigerian PhD Student Achieves Global Academic Milestones in Record Time

In academia, earning invitations to international conferences, securing competitive grants, and influencing scholarly conversations are achievements that often require years of effort. For Nigerian-born PhD student Bolatito Abolade, these milestones have all come within her first year of doctoral study in Rhetoric and Professional Communication at Iowa State University, USA.

Bolatito combines teaching excellence with innovative research. As an instructor of record in Iowa State’s English Department, she teaches foundational writing courses required of all undergraduates. Earlier this year, she was one of just five teaching assistants selected from over 1,000 applicants to represent the university at the Conference for Inspiring College Teaching (CICT) in Michigan. There, she facilitated a session on improving student writing, engaging with educators across disciplines, and exchanging strategies for effective teaching.

Her research has also gained recognition. At Iowa State’s Graduate and Professional Student Senate Conference, she presented a study on the challenges graduates face when transitioning into the workforce, offering insights relevant both in the United States and Nigeria. With a focus on organisational communication, her work examines how workplace interactions influence culture, inclusivity, and professional growth.

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In the coming months, she will present at the Association for Business Communication’s 90th Conference in California, supported by a competitive student grant, as well as at the National Communication Association’s 111th Annual Conference in Colorado. She also serves as a peer reviewer for scholarly articles and conference panels, contributing to the global academic community.

Bolatito’s achievements highlight the value of global academic exchange for Nigerian scholars. They demonstrate how access to international platforms, evidence-based teaching practices, and cross-cultural collaboration can strengthen higher education in Nigeria, better align academic programs with workforce needs, and elevate the country’s research visibility worldwide.

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