IFSA Logo

STUDENTS

FAMILIES

ALUMNI

FACULTY AND ADVISORS

  • How 3 Students Got Their Parents on Board for Study Abroad

    posted on

    How 3 Students Got Their Parents on Board for Study Abroad

    When it comes to studying abroad, we all have our own challenges to overcome—some we share, some we differ on. But what is a common thread among all of us is that it took the support of our families to get here.While a lot of my peers on this program, myself included, got the support and…

    Continue reading

  • We Create Community: Mural Painting in Valparaíso – A Digital Story

    posted on

    We Create Community: Mural Painting in Valparaíso – A Digital Story

    “Although my physical presence in the city of Valpo was temporary, the mark I left was permanent.”In the wake of the devastating 2012 fire, Carly found a way to connect to the city through a community art project for a local school. https://www.youtube.com/embed/ahdAnpSkQds?feature=oembed Carly W. | Psychology student | University of Denver | IFSA Chilean…

    Continue reading

  • The Unexpected and Everlasting Benefits of Study Abroad

    posted on

    The Unexpected and Everlasting Benefits of Study Abroad

    When I was deciding to study abroad, the last thing on my mind was my impending senior year job search. For one, I never really considered that study abroad would help me in any way down the line. I didn’t study abroad to better prepare myself for my career, I studied abroad to have an amazing…

    Continue reading

  • 4 Differences I Noticed on My Homestay

    posted on

    4 Differences I Noticed on My Homestay

    Spending only a weekend at my Scottish homestay was not nearly enough time.The two days we spent with our host family in Cumbria were jam packed with all the touristy things—day tripping around the beautiful Lake District, climbing hills (by car, thank goodness) to see the rolling green spread out before us, visiting the Beatrix Potter attractions…

    Continue reading

  • 5 Tips for Backpacking Around Europe

    posted on

    5 Tips for Backpacking Around Europe

    In the fall of 2015, I had the privilege of being able to study abroad at the University of Sussex in Brighton, England. While there, I spent a bunch of my time visiting other countries. I haven’t been able to really quantify the experience that I had abroad. Since I’ve been home, I have had…

    Continue reading

  • (En)roll with the Punches: A Guide to Australian Academia

    posted on

    (En)roll with the Punches: A Guide to Australian Academia

    I’m a worrier. If you haven’t noticed based on my previous posts, “stress” is practically my middle name. In the weeks before leaving for the University of Melbourne I freaked out—as I usually do—about almost everything. Funnily enough, though, the one thing that didn’t worry me was the actual “study” part of studying abroad. All my life I’ve been the kid who enjoys…

    Continue reading

  • Studying While Abroad – A Digital Story

    posted on

    Studying While Abroad – A Digital Story

    I never would have expected that some of my greatest memories while in Australia would’ve come from the study part of study abroad. https://www.youtube.com/embed/kuCj4HZChDA?feature=oembed Lexi K. | Creative Writing student | University of Redlands | University of Queensland Partnership in Brisbane, Australia | 2015

    Continue reading

  • Let’s Be Friends…Maybe

    posted on

    Let’s Be Friends…Maybe

    Studying abroad is about going somewhere new, expanding your world views, and making lasting memories and lasting friendships… or at least that’s the expectation everyone walks in with. Somewhere new? Check: New Zealand. Expanding world view? Check: signed up for a Māori Society class and living with a Kiwi. Lasting memories? Just the travel time…

    Continue reading

  • Counting Pounds and Pence: Being a Low-Income Student in London

    posted on

    Counting Pounds and Pence: Being a Low-Income Student in London

    On my second day in London, the English orientation staff joked that Londoners have the perception that Americans are born with a gold Amex card in hand. Although the room erupted in laughter, I knew it was very likely that a few of the one hundred or so Americans studying in London with me this…

    Continue reading

  • How I Learned to Trust My Path

    posted on

    How I Learned to Trust My Path

    “What are you going to do after you graduate?” This is one of the most dreaded questions a college student may ever hear. For many people this is an anxiety-inducing question, but for me it has always been an easy one. Since I was 13, I knew that I wanted to go into the medical…

    Continue reading

Blog Categories

Recent Comments

No comments to show.