Category Archives: Study abroad

~ Reflect, reflect, reflect!! ~

If you take anything from this blog post, let it be the quote: “We do not learn from experience… we learn from reflecting on experience.” 

While we have a class before we study abroad to help us prepare and one after to help us reflect (Spanish 394Pl Prep Programs/ Spanish Speaking World and 494 Rl Reflection/Experience Abroad), it is important to be reflecting DURING our experience abroad as well. This is solely up to you, but here are some questions you might want to ask yourself:

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~ Making Friends & Making the most of it! ~

Going abroad is intimidating and can come with many challenges… discomfort with the language, trouble making friends, and walking around somewhere where everything feels new, exciting, unknown, or unfamiliar. Although these things are intimidating, you gain a sort of confidence and proudness within yourself when you start to push your boundaries and begin to discover what you are really capable of accomplishing on your own. Just journeying to Costa Rica was a scary accomplishment for me as I was arriving at the airport at 1 or 2am which was well before my program’s local mentors/guides were set to pick me up from the airport. Let me share with you two things I find important: making the most of your time abroad and making friends.

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Reflecting on Studying Abroad in Granada

Reflections and Advice for Studying Abroad

I was nervous about so many things before studying abroad. Will I make friends? Will my host family be creepy or weird? Will I be robbed? Am I packing enough clothes? Will the Spaniards make fun of my accent?

I wish so badly that someone told me to stop worrying about the future because you have no idea what is going to happen. Just focus on the excitement of a new experience.

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My abroad experience in Madrid, the virus epicenter, during the beginning of a global pandemic.

I am writing this blog post a little more than a month before I would have been leaving for Madrid last school year, but still in 2020. Ah yes, I still think about it literally everyday. It is now nearly a year later: December 8, 2020 and I just ended my fall semester of my senior year of college. Such a weird semester. Weird, nostalgic, different, to say the least, but not entirely bad. This time last year I was prepping to go on the biggest trip and experience thus far in my life: I was so incredibly excited, ready, and nervous, too. I’ve been abroad before and to this city a handful of time, but this time was going to be different: it was abroad. I do think in some ways “studying abroad” can be too romanticized, because you picture young college students going abroad to a country that they know nothing of and just partying all the time, but obviously that’s not the case for everybody. As well as the concept of: “young student goes abroad to a foreign city and finds herself”, but there’s nothing wrong with that, because #mood, that is so relatable and I felt the same way. But the concept of studying abroad, at least my goals, were to broaden my horizons, meet new people, discover what I am capable of on my own, and soak in a culture, and that is why having my experience just cut short hurt so bad. Yes of course there will be plenty of time and opportunities in my life/our lives to travel, but there will never be a time where we are this young, wide eyed and hungry for fun and adventure, and literally have no responsibilities, but to see the world and have the time of our lives.

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Summer Study Abroad

When I came to UMass I had every intention to study abroad. I had no idea where or when I wanted to go, but I knew it would be to a Spanish-speaking country and that I would not let it come too far into my college career because I was itching to travel. Sure enough, in my first Spanish class of my freshman year, Patricia Gubitosi came to advertise the summer program to Salamanca, Spain and I instantly became obsessed with the idea of participating the following summer. So when the spring came, I applied and figured out the financials with my family and the International Programs Office and officially signed onto the trip. 

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My Experience Abroad in Sevilla, Spain

As I enter my final semester at UMass Amherst I constantly look back at my experience in Spain. All the memories are truly unforgettable and unfortunately were cut short for me and countless other college students studying abroad in various countries. Although some of my experience was taken, I can’t help but feel super lucky because of the program I chose that allowed me to visit the beautiful city of Sevilla.

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Going Abroad for the Academic Year

At first, I wasn’t sure if I should go for an entire year abroad. I was hesitant to go for the entire year since I knew I would miss out on a portion of my UMass experience and I would miss my friends and family. Despite missing UMass, I was glad I studied in Europe (sorry Amherst). I can guarantee that although it may seem hard at first to leave home, you won’t regret going for two semesters instead of one. I would be able to spend more time abroad learning new Spanish vocabulary, improving upon my speaking and listening skills, and integrating myself into a foreign culture for a longer period of time. One of the biggest decisions in the study abroad process is deciding where to study. Sevilla was the best place for me because the Universidad de Sevilla offered a program where I could fulfill a lot of my Spanish major, Communication major, and Education minor requirements. It is incredibly important to find a program that offers enough classes to take for two whole semesters and fulfills enough academic requirements so that you are able to graduate on time.  

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Spain is More Than an Ocean Away

Have you ever felt like you’re missing out on something totally life changing? As a Spanish major in my junior year at UMass Amherst, I haven’t had the opportunity to travel anywhere further than a trip to Disney World; I’m desperate for a visit to a Spanish-speaking country. I’ve spent my entire academic career hearing anecdotes about professors’ and peers’ eye-opening stays in Spain, Brazil, Costa Rica etc. Jealous of their journeys, I long to experience Spanish life for myself. 

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“La Vegetariana” en el extranjero

I traveled abroad to Salamanca, Spain during the Summer semester of 2019 when I was going into my Sophomore year at UMass. Not only was I the youngest person going on this particular trip, I was also the only strict vegetarian going on it as well. For those of you who have never traveled to Salamanca, Spain (or abroad in any sense), and are vegetarian, this is for you. It’s going to be hard. Extremely hard. But, you will get through it. Here’s my experience; Here are the hard truths.

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Países Hermanos: Ecuador and Colombia

Once known as la Gran Colombia, the modern day countries of Ecuador, Colombia, and Venezuela were once one, singular nation. Given the historical context of the three nations, they have come to be know as ‘países hermanos,’ sharing between the three of them many cultural and linguistic similarities. I, personally, have only had the pleasure of coming to know two out of three of these countries; Ecuador and Colombia. For the last three years I have spent around half of the year living in Ecuador along the Pacific coast, during the time when I spent one academic year studying abroad in Colombia. I would like to discuss of few of the similarities and differences between the two countries, and hopefully provide some clarity for anyone who is considering studying abroad in South America. Continue reading