" 0 0 p Vaat~fSemester b op tat college abroadiap may ntbe Stud- .ence but stud oVerseas- ec . r challenge By Caitlin SA athedra's' {I''n towering cat f aC oun by u1sat oute Spain sip tXeiwarGi l ier lnish co s lUnaOnda wtie eat bron dSpa heewae dwatchmountain- Pigc{fee ad moon wg lk b b°°k bags an ed to be on opolite ,the cramme Gbo, GiXseem travel- nt a fr obta-onn witheweeVnu tlike o s aow complete1each day d each dream yac e °ion, emae mwse acS*4at a nsan tudy earning ing and thr students ande wa y er catpus nr Manyt was her snsun or year, credit. csin the Grecmaian tes re sudents tae chassen estion ren.Ani acsestud nts t hp, the uestiO " tclass a cruise sb a' th e ' even on - gas iuch they an ates teylearning Arb 2... Though the sidewalks of Ann Arbor are filled with students rushing to class during the academic year, 1,975 of those University students studied abroad from fall 2009 to summer 2010, accord- ing to data from the Institute of Interna- tional Education. Mark Tessler, vice provost for inter- national affairs and the Samuel J. Elder- sveld collegiate professor of political science, said he believes study abroad is an important part of any student's aca- demic career. Tessler said the University is expanding its study abroad programs, reaching out to countries like Egypt and Israel and looking to place stu- dents on continents other than Europe. President Mary Sue Coleman also places an emphasis on study abroad as she deferred her pay raise this year of 2.75 percent, a total of $15,678, to scholarships she and her husband set up to help students study abroad. Coleman has also pledged to donate $1 for every $2 donat- ed for study abroad as part of the President's Donor Challenge for The Student Global Experience. Recently, Coleman announced the creation of the Third Century Initiative, a $50 million program which aims to further "immersive learning experiences," including study abroad, for undergraduates. With these programs in place, Tessler said he hopes more students will study abroad. Tessler speaks from personal experi- ence, having studied abroad in Israel and Tunisia as a student, when he says he believes the experience is life changing. "You learn a lot about yourself. You learn a lot about the rest of the world," Tessler said. "I suppose these are kind of like cliches, but it's true." And while Tessler acknowledges the academic caliber of the colleges may not be as high as the University's, he said it depends on the students' desire to learn and the quality of the institution. "I would say as a general proposition you don't sacrifice academic quality, but maximizing the academic excellence of a program isn't necessarily the only thing to take in consideration when you make the choice (between programs)," Tessler said. W ith five Spanish classes at the Universidad de Sevilla and doing homework during the week, Gill said she had a schedule that was harder than her classmates'. But even with the workload, she spent afternoons at coffee shops with friends, and the academics of the Univer- sity seemed far away. "It wasn't the same at all. It was less work," Gill said. Beyond academics, Gill said the pro- gram was more about the experience of living in Spain, absorbing Spanish cul- ture, speaking the language and under- standing the Spanish education system - where the true test of a course is a 20-page paper due the last day in lieu of mandatory attendance. In addition to an increased proficiency in Spanish and a newfound interest in an international career, Gill said she also grew more independent - when a train ticket almost left her stranded in Rome. "You really have to rely on yourself. When some- thing goes wrong, you can't call up your mom," Gill said. For language concentrators like Gill, Alejandro Herrero-Olaizola, a Spanish professor and associate chair of the romance languages and literature department, said he believes study-abroad is essential for proficiency and for furthering student learning. "The one thing is to be in a class- room setting at the (University), which will give you a lot of knowl- edge and sort of preparing you for being abroad and so forth. But the experience I think is really impor- tant to put that to the test,"Herrero- Olaizola said. Herrero-Olaizola added that because the language curriculum now places more of an emphasis on cultural knowledge, study-abroad offers a great entryway into the cul- ture. "We like the idea of proficiency, not only linguistic but cultural pro- ficiency as well," he said. "The two go together, because you can't just learn the language in a vacuum. So we encourage our students to go to find this cultural and linguistic immersion say in France or Spain." With the ideal mixture of culture and language, Herrero-Olaizola believes going abroad as a 20-year- old is the "right time" in life, because of the way the experience shapes students' understanding of the world. "I think going in your 20s is good for the kind of exposure you have to different people, different cul- tures and also for forcing you to be in a position to dealing with the unknown, the unexpected ... " he said. A he sat at his desk, LSA senior avid Frankel's classroom tilt- ed, rocking back and forth, as each ocean wave brought students' heads closer to their desks, lulling them to sleep. In his moving classroom, Frankel was one of the 14 University stu- dents participating in Semester at Sea last winter, or what he says is affectionately known across cam- puses as a "booze cruise." However, Frankel emphasized that the boat com- plete with housekeeping services, a beauty salon and swimming pool, is not actually a booze cruise. But with five-credits that amount to 22 total days of class from January to April, he acknowledges that his education took place on shore. "I would say the majority of the learning experience took place in the countries and not in the class- room," Frankel said. Traveling across the world from the Bahamas to Ghana to Singapore, Frankel said the ship would dock at each country, and then students were on their own to explore. "It was literally like they dropped you off (and said), 'be back on the boat by this time on this date or we're leaving without you,'"he said. In the countries he visited, Fran- kel said he learned valuable lessons from tour guides showing him the poverty in India and by seeing the resilience of the people in face of despair. "It was more eye-opening than a textbook could ever teach," Fran- kel said. "I definitely feel like after seeing some of these things it puts everything bad at home into per- spective." On the ship filled with about 700 professors and their families, college students aboard the ship and adult students from around the world, Frankel said he gained perspective himself, as he, a Jew, became good friends with a Muslim girl from Jordan. And as Frankel learned and ulti- mately decided to pursue an inter- national career, he said he thinks Semester at Sea was the right choice for a study abroad program. "I would never regret missing out on an experience (in Ann Arbor) because I think I learned more in one semester than I have in my entire life," he said. A t the University, the Center for -.Global and Inter- cultural Study admin- isters 100 study abroad programs in 40 coun- tries. The center offers the traditional study abroad experience through the Michigan Global Academic Pro- grams, Spring or Sum- mer Language Study and two facul- ty-led programs of the Global Intercultural Experience for Under- graduates and Global Course Connections. In the GCC program, students take an on-campus course and later take a two to three week trip abroad that offers an intimate view of a country. A Russian course may culminate in a trip where the professor takes stu- dents to remote Russian villages. "It's an opportunity you can't ever get as a tourist," said Nicole Bonomini, communications coordi- nator for CGIS. For pre-med, Nursing or Engi- neering students who don't have time in their course schedule for tra- ditional study abroad, there's GIEU. With this program, Dennis Beste, an intercultural programs advisor, said students can apply their learn- ing to real world situations. "We want to offer programs that kind of cater to them and their inter- ests and will also be beneficial in the long run," Beste said. "They'll get this international experience, and it won't just be going to Italy and eat- ing a bunch of spaghetti, they'll also be going to China and doing some engineeringwork." By studying HIV and AIDS in Zambia or transportation studies in China, Beste said students in GIEU programs are also adding valuable skills to their resume. "Everybody wants to do some- thing abroad and that's really a way to catch head-hunters' attention," Beste said. "A way to set yourself apart from the rest of the appli- cants." But during any study abroad pro- gram, Patrick Morgan, program assistant at the Center, said stu- dents learn time management and improve study and communication skills. "You get to see other ways of studying and engaging yourself in a subject ina way you haven't thought about it before," Morgan said. And by navigating the often vastly different class structures and overcoming problems like navi- gating a city in a foreign language, Morgan said students are prepared for life post-graduation. "The way these classes are struc- tured it's almost like the way real life is structured," Morgan said. "Things come at you that you don't expect, and it's unpredictable. You really have to take a risk and go out there to succeed." Tn the Greek capital of Athens, the steps to her classroom were already well-worn by generations of famous scholars and philosophers, as LSA senior Caitie Cooper got her humanities credits out of the way among ancient columns and stone sculptures. Though she's a neuroscience major, Cooper said she was pleasant- ly surprised to find that she enjoyed humanities, when they were posi- tioned against the backdrop of an ancient empire. "Actually being there and going on site was a completely different experience than sitting in a class- room and seeing pictures of these things," Cooper said. With five days of classes during the first section of the trip and seven days during the second section, Cooper said the classes focused on the history of the architecture of the Grecian sites. But grades didn't matter in comparison to the time spent outside the classroom. "I think it was easier in the sense of they don't grade as hard, and it was more focused on us learning about the experience as we were there rather than just grade-based," Cooper said. As she walked past white-washed houses on the island of Santorini, which she says is "the most beauti- ful place I've ever seen," explored the Peloponesse peninsula and saw the revered site of Olympia, where the Romans of yore held the Olym- pics, Cooper said she learned more than she would have if she had taken classes counting toward her major. "I feel like if I would've done sci- ence classes there, I wouldn't have come away with a better under- standing of the culture that I did," Cooper said. "I think I would've been too immersed in studying, whereas this class I got to explore those things while learning about it."