This process can be a daunting one. It will be a long journey
but the results are worth it. This post will outline and try and explain each
aspect.
1.
Contact
2.
Choose a program and country
3.
Degree requirements
4.
Finances
5.
Culture preparation
The first step is to make contact with your study abroad
department. They are ready and willing to help you through this whole process
step by step. They will have pamphlets, previous experience, and everything you
will need to begin. There may be certain restrictions and requirements specific
to your school that are important to know from the beginning. One such
restriction may be the semester you are allowed to study abroad. Once such
restriction could be that you are not allowed to study abroad in your last
semester of your degree due to your senior thesis requirements.
This second step in your process is to choose a program and
country. Depending on your degree, school, and personal goals, this may be
decided for you. As a criminal justice student, I had very little choices in
terms of the program and in my opinion my country of choice. Not a lot of the
programs had schools in their listings that were applicable to my degree. I
chose England as my country of choice because it is the birth place of our
criminal justice system. I could have justified other countries to do a
comparative analysis with our own but England makes way more sense. These decisions
are very important because you will need to justify your choice in applications
and scholarship essays.
The third step is figuring out the semester you will be able
to go abroad. It is very important to go over your degree requirements to see
what you still have to complete. If you have used all your electives already
and you only have classes required to complete for your degree you will have to
choose a school abroad who is offering those classes.
Finances are your fourth step. Your study abroad advisor
should go over the costs of the program you chose, the school, housing, and
local costs with you. If not, you can research, research, research. The
information is out there. You need to make yourself a budget. Start with how
much you will need and then you can work out if it is possible to afford it. There
are a lot of options available to you.
a.
Saved money
b.
Familial support
c.
Scholarships via your program, school, state,
country, honor societies, and clubs.
d.
Crowd funding
e.
Selling items
f.
Part-time job before leaving
Your fifth step is to prepare for months in a different
country and culture from your own. It is your reasonability to prepare yourself
for this task. It is important that you try and be as respectful as possible of
their laws and culture while you are abroad. You are representing yourself,
your school, your degree, and your home. There will be more differences than
you can adequately prepare for. These differences could be appearance,
language, customs, etc. Make an effort to look up large differences to prepare
yourself. The most important differences to research are laws and maybe common
social faux pas.
Preparing lists. Research. Be prepared with tourist destinations that are important to you, not places important to others. You may feel pressure to see Buckingham Palace. If it isn't important to you then don't do it. One of the most important things to be was Jack the Ripper, Sherlock Holmes, and the Sir Robert Peel statues (in London and Glasgow, Scotland).
• Shops to
frequent
• Food to try
• Grocery
store names
• Gift
ideas
• Addresses
to send post cards to
• Inspiration
lists
• Learning
about your country of choice (phrases/tips)
Social media holds all the answers. Pinterest is a black
hole of travel lists. I pinned every list I could find about unique stops, must
see options, and out of this world eateries. Once I had down time I sat down
and went through all of them and took note of places, people, and things to
see. After creating this master list of amazingness I narrowed it down to the
places that really spoke to me. They are at the top of my lists and are a
priority depending on time, money, and location.
If you have any questions please do not hesitate to leave them in the comment section below.
Happy Travels,
Elle
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