| Why Study Abroad? |
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| A Way to Gain Critical Career Advantage | |||
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It’s not hard to find the “easy route”: that’s the one where you go with your friends to another country; all the arrangements are made for you by the school—including the apartment where you live with your classmates. In this scenario, it doesn’t matter which country you go to because all your classes will be in English. You’ll undoubtedly have a somewhat different experience, but to do the “easy route” is to forego some of the major advantages of your time away. Consider these ways of standing out from the applicant crowd and finding your “hook.” > Study in the language of the country wherever possible, even though it makes for a tough first few weeks. (That’s assuming the native language of the country isn’t English!) You’ll smile when your potential employer realizes you really can conduct an interview in fluent Spanish. > Live with a family rather than with fellow Indians. You’ll start to understand the nuances of culture and how things work. > Select courses that take advantage of your study abroad location, such as Art History in Florence, or a study of lemurs in their natural habitat of Madagascar. > Seize the opportunity to do an internship, volunteer assignment, or work in the place you’re studying abroad. You’ll get a completely different view of the country if you work with the local community. It may also make you want to go back after college. > Experience things you’ve never done before, like joining a family for a religious celebration. Not every experience is a good one, but a certain level of discomfort or failure can make you more resilient. > Explore, explore, explore. Make your own arrangements. Take trains and buses. Get off the beaten path. Find villages that are not on any tourist map. Talk to the local people in their own language— however bad your pronunciation. Study abroad can be a welcome relief from the rest of your studies, or it can be the most formative experience of a lifetime. It can be just one more item on the resume, or it can provide the most colorful examples in your interview. If you take a few calculated risks, plan in advance, and take advantage of all study abroad has to offer, you will become that “memorable candidate”—the one who truly gets the employer’s attention. In the process, you will have developed skills and attitudes that will stay with you for a lifetime. |
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