What can I say about studying abroad other than it is 100% AMAZING! These trips honestly rate up there with marrying my husband and raising our daughters as the most formative experiences of my life. Prior to going to Spain in college, I had only traveled in the US and with my family. Living in Spain, staying with a Spanish family, attending class, traveling throughout Europe, seeing the lives that other people lead, having bad days, getting lost, being misunderstood, and being so far out of my comfort zone changed me in so many ways. That experience (and all the subsequent trips) taught me to see life from someone else's perspective. Studying abroad taught me to recognize and appreciate the privilege that I had growing up. It taught me to see people and not stereotypes. It taught me that being uncomfortable helps me to grow in ways I couldn't have imagined. It taught me that there is so much out there that I have yet to experience.
So what does this have to do with me as a teacher? Every year I spend more and more time talking with my students about the glory that is studying abroad. While I haven't formalized the goal (mostly because I'm not sure how to measure it!), I would like to increase the number of students that I encounter who go on to have some sort of study abroad experience. As I tell them, I don't even care if they go to a Spanish-speaking country to learn Spanish (although I do like to highlight the advantages of doing so), but I do think that living and studying in somewhere other than their home culture is SO important that any destination for any length of time is invaluable.
As I was thinking about this post, I surveyed my Facebook friends to see who had gone abroad, where they had gone, and why they had chosen to do so.
Here are some of the places to which they traveled:
Costa Rica, Spain , Mexico, Ireland, Australia, Nicaragua, New Zealand, Germany, and Indiana
Here's why they decided to study abroad:
to pursue a Spanish minor, to really learn Spanish, to travel around Europe, to learn Italian, to take a course in tropical ecology and evolution (although she then changed her major to Spanish), improve speaking skills, take in a new culture, travel, get graduate credits, experience teaching from a different perspective, try new things, challenge oneself, meet cute European girls, and to become a better Spanish teacher
Now to the challenge...what can I do to help students see the value in studying abroad? Stayed tuned in!
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