Merida, Mexico
IFSA Mérida Universities Program
Program Overview
WELCOME TO A MODERN CITY WITH ANCIENT ROOTS
With 300 days of sunshine a year, a reputation as one Latin America’s safest environments, and two outstanding universities, Mérida has plenty of allure. Dig into rich layers of Mayan culture. Take advantage of opportunities to build language skills as you study and socialize with peers at Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán and Universidad Modelo. And round it all out with unique excursions and a homestay to enhance local connection.
This is an exclusive IFSA-Designed Program. Learn more about these affordable programs here.
Details at a Glance
Application deadline
Minimum GPA
2.50
Credit load
15
Housing
Single Room Option, Homestay
Instruction language
Spanish
Language prerequisites
Four semesters of university-level Spanish or equivalent
Visa required?
Not in most cases. Learn more.
Academics
Our IFSA Mérida Universities Program offers semester programs at the Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán (UADY) and Universidad Modelo in stunning Mérida, Mexico, allowing you to study alongside local students and experience two types of Mexican higher education institutions.
IFSA ELECTIVE CLASSES
Choose from several classes designed exclusively for IFSA participants. All IFSA classes are taught in Spanish. Classes may vary by term based on faculty availability and student interest.
Advanced Spanish I or Advanced Spanish II
Language of Instruction: Spanish
While in Mérida, you can opt to continue your Spanish language study. A mandatory pre-arrival language assessment will determine your appropriate language level. Based on your score, IFSA may require you to take a Spanish language class to support your academic success in Spanish-taught direct-enroll classes. (3 U.S. semester credit hours)
Exploring Yucatán: Community and Culture
Language of Instruction: Spanish
Through intentionally designed cocurricular activities and meaningful reflection, this class takes you beyond tourism into rich intercultural dialogue and active engagement with your host community. While navigating daily life in the Yucatán, you will be challenged to embrace an anthropological perspective as you explore cultural identity and examine diversity in the context of Mexican political, economic, and sociocultural structures. Ultimately, you will develop personal strategies for engaging with differences of any kind following your study abroad experience, making it an ideal class for those seeking transferable skills and competencies for success in the global marketplace. (3 U.S. semester credit hours)
Contemporary Issues in Public Health in the Yucatán
Language of Instruction: Spanish
An increased diversity within our communities has presented healthcare providers with many new challenges when responding effectively to patients’ well-being. This class provides an overview of healthcare in the Yucatán and examines the public and private healthcare systems in Mexico and the use of both mainstream and traditional approaches in urban and rural settings. Through numerous field visits, students will consider local prevailing health issues such as cervical cancer, obesity, diabetes, and heart disease, and deepen their intercultural agility as they seek to understand how patients’ expectations and understandings of their health differ from their own cultural context. (3 U.S. semester credit hours)
Directed Research
Language of Instruction: Spanish
This class offers a unique opportunity for students to delve deeply into host context research projects. Students will be guided through projects that are both feasible in the study abroad context and relevant to their broader intellectual interests. The class is structured through regular individual meetings with a faculty mentor to discuss the formation and execution of a research plan and, depending on the specific project, the possibility to conduct field- or internet-based research. At the end of the semester, students present a formal research paper. Research opportunities are conducted in Spanish. (3 U.S. semester credit hours)
DIRECT-ENROLL CLASSES
Select additional integrated classes at the UADY and/or Modelo, maximizing your immersion into local student life. Your IFSA Enrollment Counselor can help you find the classes you need, but you may explore classes through the links below.
CHART Your Course
Find the classes you need fast with CHART. Our easy-to-use tool shows you classes recently taken by IFSA students.
Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán (UADY)
- Architecture (architecture, studio art, visual arts)
- Accounting and Business (accounting, marketing, international business, information technology administration)
- Economics (economics, international business)
- Psychology
- Social Sciences and Humanities (anthropology, archaeology, social communication, history, literature, tourism)
- Look for a link to licenciaturas (majors) on the homepage of that department
- After clicking on licenciaturas, look for a link to “plan de estudio,” “asignaturas,” “mapa curricular” or “temarios.” These are the lists of classes offered in that particular major. In some licenciaturas, you can click on the class title to see a class description or syllabus. This is not available for all departments.
Universidad Modelo
On the general Universidad Modelo website you can find classes related to:
- Architecture
- Business
- Design
- Engineering
- Health Sciences
- Law (including political science)
- Humanities
We know finding the classes you need is important in your decision to study abroad. If you are looking for a particular class, please contact your IFSA Enrollment Counselor for assistance.
Lab & Field Trip Fees
Please review syllabi and course materials when registering for direct-enroll classes. Certain classes may have a one-off lab or field trip fee disclosed in the syllabus or during the first meeting of the class. These fees are not included in your IFSA program fee. You will be responsible for these fees, whether they are billed and paid by IFSA or billed to you.
Language Requirement
To enroll in Spanish-taught classes, you must have a specific language level. Please visit our Language Requirements page for more details. If you have questions about whether you qualify, contact your IFSA Enrollment Counselor.
Class Restrictions
UADY limits the number of visiting international students who can enroll in each class. For this reason, it’s important that you identify multiple classes that align with your academic interests and needs and discussed these options with your home campus study abroad and academic advisors prior to your arrival on-site.
The only UADY school where IFSA students are not allowed to take classes is the Medicine School.
While students can technically enroll in biology, veterinary medicine, and zoology, the UADY science campus is located two hours outside of Mérida, so it may not be practical to consider taking classes there.
Directed Research
Engage in individualized field research with faculty experts on a contemporary issue of interest. Regular meetings with faculty will assist in the formation and execution of research plans, and they will guide you on how to thoughtfully and critically integrate academic research with experiential learning. You will sharpen your written and oral communication skills through the development of articulate and comprehensive research that is respectful to the sensitivities of the local culture.
If you chose to research live human subjects, live animals or another topic that is deemed by IFSA to be required to be reviewed by the Institutional Research Board (IRB) at your home institution, then you will have to file your project with your home institution’s IRB board and submit your result to IFSA. Your IFSA Enrollment Counselor will review your application materials to help determine if you must file with IRB.
Research opportunities are conducted in Spanish. For more detailed information and examples of previous student placements, contact your IFSA Enrollment Counselor.
Volunteering
Volunteering while studying abroad in Mérida is an enriching experience, both personally and academically. Students report that even volunteering a few hours per week enhanced their study abroad experience by providing them with access to the local culture and a deeper understanding of problems that face Mérida’s inhabitants on a daily basis. Several volunteering opportunities exist in Mérida. Placements are made after you arrive onsite and are contingent upon a personal interview, your language level and available time commitment. IFSA has prepared a list of places where you, as a visiting student, can volunteer to do social service. While this is purely optional, a commitment on your part is needed in order to arrange a placement. Upon completion of your period of volunteerism, you will be issued a certificate indicating the number of hours you dedicated and the type of work you completed. Volunteering does not earn academic credit and will not appear on your Butler University transcript. Examples of places where students can be placed:
- Colegio Americano: School located in downtown Merida with different educational levels from preschool to high school. IFSA students usually support teachers with conversational sessions with students.
- Fundación Brazos Abiertos Internacional (BAI): BAI’s mission is to empower the people of the Yucatán to respond to HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted infections (STIs), and teenage pregnancies to live healthy lives.
- Aprendamos Juntos: This organization works for the dignity, rights, and respect of people with intellectual disabilities and their full inclusion in society.
Some options for volunteering on a per-day basis are:
- Reffetorio Mérida: Cultural project designed to offer a gastronomic experience, renowned for transforming surplus ingredients into nutritious and beautiful meals, for people in situations of social vulnerability and to provide the local community with a space where beauty and service are used as tools to create social change.
- Hoy en tu comunidad: Through this program, free services are provided to communities in the interior of the state. The volunteers are students who participate with medical and nutritional advice, dental care, environmental education, and social impact.
APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS
Eligibility
- You must be at least 18 years of age. Students under 18 may be accepted on a case-by-case basis.
- You must be currently attending or recently graduated from a U.S. or Canadian community college, technical college, two-year college, four-year college, or four-year university.
- You must have completed at least one (1) full-time semester of study at your home institution before the beginning of the term.
- Eligibility requirements can vary among host institutions. Please ask your IFSA Enrollment Counselor for specific information.
Recommendation Letter
Not required. A directed research site may request a reference letter before placement is finalized.
Language Requirement
Four (4) semesters of college-level Spanish or an Intermediate II level proficiency is required.
TRANSCRIPT
Upon completion of your program, IFSA will send an official Butler University transcript to your home university with your coursework converted to the U.S. semester credit hour system. You will also have access to an unofficial transcript in your IFSA Student Portal. The transcript reflects classes taken, credits attempted, and grades earned during your term abroad. This service is included in your study abroad program at no additional cost. See our Transcripts page for more information.
Excursions
Activities and excursions are designed to pull you into the communities you visit and encourage cultural connections of every kind. There’s no extra fee to participate in these optional outings—everything is included in your program fee.
Below are a selection of activities and excursions from previous terms; options may vary for your program. Due to the seasonal nature of many of program activities, we cannot guarantee a specific activity or excursion will be available in a given term or program.
Activities
- City-as-Text Activity: Get to know Mérida’s beautiful downtown and the surrounding neighborhoods. Learn both the legendary history of the city and the region as well as contemporary social processes that affect the city’s daily life, such as touristification and gentrification. This activity includes a talk about the city in the classroom and bus tour in the historical center.
- Mayan World Museum Visit: Visiting this museum offers a cultural and historic context needed to fully appreciate excursions to the Mayan archeological sites of Chichén Itzá and Uxmal.
- Biciruta Tour: Approach the city from a different perspective. Usually the streets are full of cars, but during this tour the roads are closed so that you can visit them. Both citizens and visitors enjoy touring the beautiful avenue of Paseo de Montejo in this unique way!
Excursions
- Uxmal and Campeche Trip: This fascinating archaeological site and its Puuc style of architecture showcase the pinnacle of Mayan population design and art, with lessons that still inform modern Mérida. You won’t soon forget the impressive Pyramid of the Magician, constructed more than 1,000 years ago. This trip includes a visit to the state of Campeche, with its beautiful historic center and impressive walls built to protect the Caribbean port against attacks from the sea.
- Río Lagartos Trip: The Río Lagartos Biosphere Reserve is a protected natural area on the Yucatán coast. It is located at the intersection of where the waters of the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea converge. On this tour enjoy the beautiful beaches of the region, take a clay bath, and appreciate the flora and fauna of the mangroves.
- Ek-Balam and Cenote Xcanché Visit: Ek Balam is a wonderful Mayan archaeological site located in the eastern part of the state of Yucatán. Among the jungle vegetation are iconic structures of pre-Hispanic Maya architecture such as the ball game, the sacbé or sacred path, stelae, friezes, and masks. It will not be difficult to transport back in time and imagine the life of the ancient Maya of the region. Additionally, visit the Xcanché cenote, which had religious and mythological importance for the people of Ek-Balam and is currently of great hydrological relevance for the population of the area.
Housing and Meals
Housing
Single Room Option, HomestayMeals
All IncludedDetails
In Mérida, students live with local families in what’s known as a homestay. Homestays make it easy to immerse yourself in the region’s rich culture. They also provide many opportunities to build your Spanish language skills, if that’s part of your plan.
Homestays: Who’s at home?
We place students with carefully screened families, many of whom have been hosting IFSA students for nearly 20 years. Many have grown children who have left home and enjoy having young people around. Families host up to two IFSA students at a time.
You might live with a retired couple and their beloved terrier, with frequent visits from their young grandchildren. Your hosts might have high school-age children and a grandparent living with them. Or you might join a single mom who shares her home with her adult daughter and grandson, with another adult child living nearby.
- Location. Host families live throughout the city. You might live close to downtown within easy walking distance to the IFSA Program Center—or 45–60 minutes away via public transportation (that’s just 15 minutes away via Uber).
- Living space. Each student has their own bedroom. Bathrooms are sometimes private but could be shared with other family members. Your hosts provide a desk or other suitable place to study.
- Meals. Three meals a day included. Your homestay family understands that you also need time out to be with friends and explore—they’ll appreciate a heads-up when you plan to eat out. Students buy their own snacks.
- Language. Few families are fluent in English, but most can communicate. We do our best to place students without Spanish skills with English-speaking families.
- Other details. Internet included. Air conditioning is limited to eight hours at night, so expect to adjust to heat and humidity in this tropical environment. Most homes have a washing machine that students can use once a week. In some cases, the family offers to do the laundry. If the family does not have a washing machine, they will take the student once a week to the laundromat.
- Nearby. Cafes, restaurants, malls, and public transportation.
Dates and Fees
Get Started
Selena Rincon
Enrollment Counselor