Tuesday 21 December 2010

A little conversation goes a long way...

Whoo! Berlin for the holidays!! I am here, in this amazing city, with my boyfriend and staying with friends. More friends on the way. Although this is one of the only Christmases I will spend without my family and I miss them very much, this is also a very special, warm time to be here. The Christmas markets are in full effect and the holiday spirit is in the air.

Here in Berlin, I have had the chance to meet some very amazing people and have fantastic conversations. One of my new friends asked me last night, why I love it here in Europe so much. I gave my standard observations--the health care system far surpasses ours, the educational system is excellent, the recycling program is phenomenal, and of course, you can drink beer wherever you want here. After hours of thought-provoking conversation (our dinner last night went for 8 hrs!!), I realized what I love the most about being here. It's the conversations I get to have here with the many new people I have been meeting, and more importantly, the new perspectives I can take from them.

To see through the eyes of a person who has been born and raised in a completely different environment than you can be a mind-blowing experience. Your comprehension of the world and the people living with in it can be turned inside out if viewed from the other side.

This is what study abroad is all about. Sure it's about traveling, seeing new things, trying new foods and learning about new cultures. But it's really about the new people you meet and the fresh perspectives you can take from them. Before leaving the States, I didn't even think Americans had a culture. Now that I am away and have something to compare my experiences to, I can see what a rich and powerful culture we actually have.

It's like being stuck behind a huge semi-truck on the freeway for most of your life. You can't see anything except what's right in front of you. When you take a step back, or even better, take a new turn and get off that road altogether, you will see a whole new world out there.

Christmas Markets in Nuremberg
Nuremberg Christmas Markets



Waffle with whipped cream and Bailey's!!!

http://www.iie.org/en/Programs/Gilman-Scholarship-Program

Tuesday 30 November 2010

Frustration Station, Population Me

So here I am, 3 months in, and still not able to put a sentence together in German. I am so frustrated! I keep talking to people, all kinds of people (students, teachers, friends, other Germans, my boyfriend's friends in the Czech Republic...), about my frustration and my apparent lack of motivation to learn this language. What I keep getting told again and again is to "hang in there!", "it'll get easier!", and "this always happens this time of year, but after the holidays everyone seems to bounce right back".

These words of wisdom are nice to hear...but how do I know they are right? Just because I am feeling the same way other students did last year who survived the holiday rut and then continued on to have the time of their lives second semester, how do I know that is the same thing that is going on with me?

Am I really just in a rut because I'm so far away from family and friends during the holiday? Is it because of the 5 inches of snow covering my beloved jogging trails and slushy grey puddles taking over the streets? Is it because my roommates never, ever come out of their rooms and I don't see any way to get to know these people I am living with??? Or is it that I really am just not cut out for study abroad?

As always, I am keeping busy. I am trying hard to escape my California bubble that is composed of the other 53 Californian exchange students that are living all around me in this tiny town. I am trying to meet more Germans and international students. I found a couchsurfing group here in Tübingen and I am trying to become an active member.

And most importantly, I am not giving up. I just read a blog from an Australian exchange student who did her study abroad at Ulm University here in Baden-Württemberg. She said she was given this advice:

"There comes a day when you say, "From now on, I will speak only in German." She goes on to say, "Make this day come sooner--it has nothing to do with how well you speak, only your attitude."

Ah, now there's the words of wisdom I was looking for. Because no matter how many reasons I can come up with for the frustration and lack of motivation I am feeling, I know that it is really all up to me. No one can do this for me, I just gotta make it happen.

Here's the link to the Australian blog, in case you'd like to see what she has to say about study abroad:
http://www.uni-ulm.de/fileadmin/website_uni_ulm/io/INC_Exchange_Reports/CTech/AU_Melbourne_Monash-U_2008_MY.pdf

And as always, the link to the Gilman Scholarship Program website, who helped make all this possible for me:
http://www.iie.org/en/Programs/Gilman-Scholarship-Program

Thursday 18 November 2010

Relationships and Study Abroad

So if you think about it...what is study abroad all about?? Really, it's all about you. So when you bring another person into that equation, it doesn't quite add up. I can tell you from my experience that being involved in a relationship while you are studying abroad is very, very hard. Not only is it really hard to be away from the person you love, but it takes away from your personal experience to still be so attached to something that is not there with you.

For now, I am lucky because my boyfriend is still here in Europe with me, but he is not in Germany. So not only am I doing the long distance thing (which we all know sucks!) but every trip I take is with him or to him. This means that I am limiting the amount of people I meet or really get to know and also limiting the new places I am visiting. When you are in a serious, committed relationship, it is not just about you, but both of you. And I have to admit that as much as I love my boyfriend and don't wish anything were different, I do know that things would be a bit easier for me if I were single.

And I see it all around me. People breaking up with boyfriends and girlfriends back home left and right, because it's just too hard. I have other friends that just got involved with someone back home before they came, and they are always wondering what they are doing, hoping to get an email, holding back from the new people they meet here because of the maybe that is back home...

That being said, here are my recommendations for those of you who are getting ready to study abroad:

 1)  If you are not involved with anyone before you leave, DONT get involved! Stay single! You will thank me for this :)

2) If you just met someone or recently got involved before you leave, put things on hold. The last thing you want to do is limit your experiences and the things that could be for something back home that you are not really that attached to yet anyway.

3) If you are in a serious, long-term relationship....well, get ready for tough times. It's so hard to be out and about seeing new things and meeting new people while your partner is on the other side of the world. I'm not saying it can't be done, but it is really hard.

Contradictory to my own words, my boyfriend and I are stronger than ever right now. But then again......I get to see him every other weekend. And it's still hard. We are living two separate lives, but still trying to share them. And he will go home soon. So.....I'm getting ready for some seriously rough times.

In summary.......stay single if you can! And if you're really committed and in it for the long haul, well, I guess you'll make it through, because that's what love is all about. For better or worse :)

Sitges in the summer, good times in Spain!

http://www.iie.org/en/Programs/Gilman-Scholarship-Program

Saturday 6 November 2010

The Fall is beautiful here. Absolutely gorgeous. The leaves falling look like multicolored snowflakes, and the ones that have managed to stay attached are the most brilliant reds and yellows I have ever seen. We don't have a Fall like this in California, so being here now is amazing. And going jogging is much more fun when you're running through piles of leaves :)

And the stars, oh the stars....even though I am a self-proclaimed city girl, we don't have stars in the city like we do here.

Sometimes it's the little things that make it all worthwhile.

yay!!

 http://www.iie.org/en/Programs/Gilman-Scholarship-Program

Monday 1 November 2010

Just wanted to let you know things are looking up :)

Whenever I'm feeling really down, I like to make myself go outside and find something that makes me happy. So last weekend, once I finally had some time to myself, I went out exploring in Tuebingen. A very cute town indeed. With lots more to discover! Of course I took a thousand pictures, but more importantly, it made me feel more comfortable...more at home.

I still feel like my German is suffering--I feel like everyone in class understands the teacher and each other, but me. I'm having such a hard time talking to my new German roommates and other new German friends, but most people are very patient and encouraging. All you gotta do is try. And practice!

As you can see....studying abroad is a roller coaster for most of us. You will have your ups and you will have your downs. Sometimes the downs are really, really far down there...but hang in there, because the ups are always coming!!


View from the Tuebingen Castle


Tuebingen Botanic Garden (1 of them)
Tuebingen Marktplatz
Tuebingen Marktplatz








 
http://www.iie.org/en/Programs/Gilman-Scholarship-Program

Thursday 21 October 2010

Tough Times Call for More Kleenex...

(as written on 10/15/2010...I was on a train without my computer)

I knew this would be hard. But I never knew it would be this hard. They said I'd go through culture shock, but I thought, "I'm strong, it won't get me down."

They even said some people would want to go home. "NO way, not me!!!"

And then...a few days ago it hit me. I mean it really hit me. I thought I was going through culture shock before, when I was living with the host family. But now, it's hitting me really hard. I can't believe how strong the urge is to just give up and go home.

This is very unlike me. I do not quit. I am strong, independent, and self-motivated. But...I miss my family, my friends, and oh man, I really miss my cat!!! I miss knowing where everything is and how everything works. I miss knowing and understanding the language spoken all around me.

And now, I don't know how anything works, I don't know where anything is, and I cannot speak the language beyond a few very basic things. I hate feeling so silent and awkward. I can't understand my roommates let alone have a conversation with them. I can barely understand what my teachers are saying and I find myself struggling to keep up. My boyfriend has to go back to the States and I'm afraid we'll break up. (Just like "they" said we all would...)

Oh and it's cold here. I mean really, REALLY cold.

It's insane how hard this is. One sentence keeps running through my mind. "Why did I do this to myself!?!?"

Despite what you are now most likely thinking, I am not writing this to scare you off. I am writing this because this is real. Studying abroad is difficult in almost every aspect. I am writing this for two reasons:

1) I know that I will be ok and I will get through this, but really only because I was told I would go through this. And since I knew this would happen, I don't feel isolated and stupid for coming here. I know what I am feeling is normal. And if you study abroad, you need to know this too!!
 
2) I am also writing this for myself. So when I start feeling better, I can look back on this and see how far I've come. Because I know that I will feel better. All I have to do is have faith in myself and hang in there.

Know how I know? Because "they" said I would. Every student I spoke with who went through this program last year had a fantastic time. When I explain how I'm feeling now, they say, "Oh yea...I remember that."

So what to do until I get past all this? Same as usual. Stay active, keep busy, and never stop exploring this new city of mine. I'm trying to put myself out there and keep practicing my German, no matter how bad I think it is.

Deep down, I know that I just need to stick it out and enjoy myself as much as possible. Go along for the ride and leave the Kleenex at home!
Neckar River, Tübingen
                                                       
Makin' burritos, a little taste of home!


East Side Gallery, Berlin Wall

http://www.iie.org/en/Programs/Gilman-Scholarship-Program

Friday 8 October 2010

Feeling weird...again

A few days after the last post, I started feeling much better. Much more comfortable. Not so weirded out.

Maybe it was because the sun was finally shining. Maybe it was because I got all my stuff unpacked and my new room all set up. Maybe it was because of the great shoe store I found right around the corner.

And then I went to Prague. This is my 3rd trip to Prague, because this is where my boyfriend lives. We came to Europe together, with the hope of staying here together for the next year. Although he is suffering from the same culture shock symptoms I am wading my way through, he is nice and settled here in Prague. Nice job, nice apartment, great roommates, and really awesome new friends. And Prague is happening. Breathtakingly beautiful and full of culture and history, Prague is definitely the place to be.

But now....we don't know if he can stay. It's long, complicated, and beureaucratic to the max. The reality is that if he goes home, things aren't looking so good for us. We're willing to try the long distance thing, but it's very hard to be in a relationship where you can't see the other person for months on end. And with school being my number one priority, I may not be able to live in the same city as him for 2 years.

Ouch.

I'm only writing about this because this is definitely something to consider when choosing to study abroad. Being so far from the person you love is nearly impossible--most everyone in my program who started out in a relationship has broken up with their partner by now.

So, now, I'm sitting in his house, waiting for him to come home from work, and wondering what the future holds in store for us. Feelin' weird again. I wish I knew what was going to happen. Hmmmm wait...no I don't. That would be way too boring.

I'm starting school in a few days, but now after 10 days in the Czech Republic, I'm not sure I even know how to speak German anymore...I'm scared!!! But that's not until Monday.

For now...I'm in beautiful Prague....and loving every minute :)

Prague Castle

Tuesday 28 September 2010

Good times in a strange land

Long time, no blog. Sorry about that. I've been in a really weird head space lately and struggling with what to write. I wanted to keep this all positive, but the reality is, and this is something you should know if you want to study abroad, is that there will be good days and bad days and it's not always all fun and games. Actually, much of what you will go through is quite frustrating. But just as I've been telling my friends they've got to hang in there, it will get better, they're telling me the same thing....and I know they're right.

In the past 2 weeks I've been to Heidelberg, which is gorgeous...

Heidelberg
Heidelberg Castle


and Munich, for Oktoberfest. Oktoberfest has been something I've been dreaming of going to for so long, and it was definitely all that I had hoped for and more. Getting back...was a different story. Let's just say you get what you pay for, and the cheapest ticket isn't always best. Helpful hint #1 when traveling on Germany's rail system, the Deutsche Bahn. If you need help, miss your train, find yourself lost, just go to the Deutsche Bahn information booth. They can point you in the right direction, or as in our case, they put us in a free taxi from Stuttgart to Horb (which would have been over 100 euros) when our series of 4 delayed trains caused us to miss our last connection home. A stressful night, but thankfully we all made it safely back to Horb.

In the past 2 days, I have left my host family in the teeny tiny village of Eutigen for the slightly larger but still small town of Tuebingen, where I will begin classes at the university in about 2 weeks. I've gone back and forth over the host family experience. Definitely worth it, and I definitely recommend it for any student studying abroad. It's a great way to experience the culture and learn how daily life is lived. But every coin has a flip side, and there were plenty of awkward moments and things I'm chalking up to cultural misunderstandings. But you know, that's what this is all about. And believe me, things that you learn the hard way are not easily forgotten.

So. Now I am in Tuebingen. This is what I worked so hard for. This is what I cried over when I thought I wouldn't be able to make it.

This is what I've been dreaming of.

Now...I'm here. Finally. It feels normal and inside out at the same time. Does that make sense? I find myself in yet another completely new situation. Living with strangers. That I haven't really met yet. I have no idea how this is going to go, and although I am trying to make myself comfortable, I'm really not sure what to make of this just yet.

But just when I want to hide in my room and shut this new world out, something inside me knows I need to go outside and see what's out there. Who knows what I might find??? It could make me feel better, it could make me feel worse, but I'll never know unless I go and check it out, right?

Oktoberfest, Munich!!!





http://www.iie.org/en/Programs/Gilman-Scholarship-Program

Sunday 12 September 2010

A moment of peace

I've been here in Germany for a little over a month now and I still don't think it's quite sunk into my brain that I am living here. I definitely have my good days and bad days, and although I've managed to settle into a little bit of groove, I still have a lingering cloud of discombobulation hanging over my head. To counteract my  scattered feelings, I try to stay as active as possible. I jump on every chance I can find to try something new. Sometimes it works out, sometimes not...but I still keep jumping.


Like our student group trips on Saturdays. We get to go to a different city in Germany every week, which, I must say, is truly awesome. What an amazing opportunity!! But...let's just say I feel really bad for our group trip leaders. As well as everybody else who has the unfortunate luck to be in the same train car as 50 super loud and obnoxious American students. It's a bit of a catch 22 for me. I love to travel, but not with such a big group. I like to stay with the group so I can experience new things with my friends, but I am also extremely independent and love to go and explore on my own.


Situations like this tend to drive me a little insane...


But...I always manage to find my "zen" moment, someway, somehow. Like yesterday, when we went to Konstanz, Germany. I stayed with the group for the first part, but then I broke off alone. I ended up on the trail around the Bodensee (Lake Constance), part of which is actually in Switzerland. I sat there at the edge of the lake, with the calm clear blue waves lapping against my feet, the distant sound of motorboats out on the water, and the soft autumn sun warming my face, and I felt a wave of comfort wash over me that I had no idea I was missing. It was the first time I felt truly at home in a long time. And it felt good. The best part was that I found that all by myself.
Ahhhhhh Konstanz....

The Bodensee and my moment of peace :)

http://www.iie.org/en/Programs/Gilman-Scholarship-Program 

Wednesday 1 September 2010

How to survive culture shock

Culture shock. It's a real thing. And if you're going to study abroad, everyone is going to tell you about it. Wikipedia describes it as "the anxiety and feelings (of surprise, disorientation, uncertainty, confusion, etc.) felt when people have to operate within a different and unknown culture such as one may encounter in a foreign country."

Yep. It can come in many forms. You may feel angry at the people you are now surrounded by that are different from you. You may feel lost and isolated. You may feel such a whirlwind of emotions that you won't even know what to call it. For me, and lots of other students around me, it comes in the form of homesickness. Just this feeling of incredible sadness and depression, with the thought of "what am i doing here?" constantly running through the mind.

So what? Time to give up? Never!!! Here's some tips that helped me work my way through my own bout with culture shock (which I am sure is not over yet). Maybe it can help you too.

1) Don't isolate yourself. Do not, I repeat, do not lock yourself in your room because the outside world is too overwhelming. This is the quickest way to let culture shock take over!

2) Keep doing the things you love to do, but adapt these things to your new culture. For me, it's running, hiking, just being outside in general that I love to do, so I walk home from school every day, and try to get out running or hiking two or three times a week. It's a great way to still feel "normal" while experiencing your new enviornment at the same time.


3) Stay active. Make sure you don't have too much "downtime" because that gives you time to think about what every else at home is doing.

4) Get involved! Sign up for that class trip, go check out your new city, or invite a new friend over for dinner (it's especially fun to cook something for them that is native to your country that they've never tried).

You have to make the best out of every moment you have while studying abroad. It'll be over before you know it so make sure you don't let what could be the time of your life pass you by!

Get out there and enjoy it!!

 

Sunday 15 August 2010

Living with a Gastfamilie

The part of my study abroad program that I was most apprehensive about was living with a guest family. For the first six weeks of our program, we students are split up and we go to live with individual families here in Germany. The purpose of the host family is for us to be able to really experience the German way of life. If we are sent straight to the university, chances are we will cling to each other as we suffer through our individual culture shock symptoms, and we won't get a chance to really experience German culture. We will stay nice and comfy in our little American bubbles we build around ourselves in this strange environment.

So, we split up. And live with German families. Some speak a little English. Some don't. Some speak a completely different dialect of German that even some other Germans cannot understand. How are we supposed to learn the German culture if we cannot communicate? How am I supposed to go from backpacking throughout Europe with my best friends all summer to living with a family I cannot even speak to? I haven't even lived with my own family since I was 18 years old!!!

But...it's part of the program. If I want to study abroad, I must do this. Once again, I will not back down now. Too late to turn back! I was very, very nervous to meet my family. What would they think of me? Will they hate my tattoos? Will I be able to talk to them? Will they understand that I am a vegetarian? Just how awkward is this going to be?

As it turns out, my family is great. The mom speaks a little English, and although communication is difficult, we are working through it. The dad speaks almost no English, so I have not been able to talk with him too much, but that will come. I am learning so much already! They have two kids--the little girl is 8 and the little boy is 5. They are a huge help to me, as they can work with me on the basics. We play games that are fun and help my German skills at the same time. My family is not the traditional German family I expected; they are very modern and act much like my family did when I was little.

So, while communication is limited to awkward sentences and lots of charades, I am adapting to family life and I am growing more comfortable by the minute. I spent my Saturday night jumping on a trampoline, painting 8 yr old toenails, and having ridiculous dance parties to very interesting German music, what about you? ;)

If you find yourself in this situation, grab a dictionary, put on a smile, and keep and open mind. Jump right in because you never know what will happen!

http://www.iie.org/en/Programs/Gilman-Scholarship-Program

Saturday 14 August 2010

Finally on my way!

(as written on August 11th, 2010...on my way to Tuebingen!!)
Having never left the United States before this trip, I had my own stereotypical expectations about what it would be like to visit a foreign country. I knew I would have a difficult time with food since I am a vegetarian. I knew that I would end up getting really lost. I knew I would definitely stick out as a tourist in certain places. I had heard about culture shock, but did not really expect to encounter this sort of thing until I had actually settled down in Tuebingen.

At first, I felt pretty much at home in the countries I traveled to. Ireland's airport looks disappointingly a lot like the airport in my home town of Columbus, Ohio. Actually a lot of the rural areas I traveled to look like Ohio. It was not until I reached Amsterdam that I felt like I was truly in a different country, because the main language spoken there is not English. My boyfriend urged us all to learn a little Dutch for the few days we would spend there, but we scoffed at him, thinking, “Everyone knows English there, we'll be fine!”

Although this was true, almost everyone did speak a little English everywhere we went, we found it to be very much in our favor to speak a little of the native tongue in the countries we visited. We learned to say “hello”, “thank you”, “please”, “excuse me”, and “goodbye” in Dutch, Spanish, Italian, German, and Czech, and this little bit of extra effort was much appreciated in every country. People were delighted and grateful that we had shown an interest in their culture, and weren't just there to party and find our way to the nearest McDonald's. Just as we have a stereotypical idea of what people from other countries are like, they have their own ideas of what Americans are like. Learning just a little bit of the native tongue earned us great service, good directions, and tips on the local spots we would not have been able to find on our own.

However, I did not make it much past the basics in any language that I tried to speak, and I found myself uncomfortably silent while at restaurants, grocery stores, and other social spots. I'm used to cracking jokes with the cashier, commenting on the weather with the server, discussing the scene with the bartender...and in a country where I can barely say “hello” and 'thank you”, I found myself doing a lot of smiling and nodding. Not being able to communicate felt odd and uncomfortable.

Going grocery shopping was a whole new world of frustration. It took me hours to grocery shop when I had to bust out the dictionary in front of every item I thought about buying. Several times, I had a very strong urge to just give it up and go home. I was sick of everything being so hard to figure out, and not being able to ask anyone for help was very discouraging for me.

But..there is no giving up now. This is my dream, and despite all the frustration and anxiety, I have faith that I will figure everything out. If there is one thing traveling abroad can give you, it is confidence and faith in yourself. As we speak, I am on bus from Prague to Stuttgart, where I will have to find my way to the airport to catch another bus to Tuebingen. I am alone for the first time in two and a half months. I am traveling in a country that I barely speak the language of, on a bus full of people speaking a second language I don't speak. Honestly, I am terrified right now. I have no idea what lies ahead of me, which is a very scary thing, but also very exciting. This is what I worked so hard for. This is the day I've been waiting for—the first day of the study abroad program. Wish me luck!!!



Saturday 7 August 2010

So I cheated a little bit...

Since this blog is about studying abroad, I really should have started it before I left the country. However, my experience abroad started close to two months ago, when I flew from JFK airport in New York City to Dublin, Ireland with my boyfriend, my sister, and another friend of ours. From there we had a whirlwind backpacking trip around Europe for the next few weeks. After Dublin, we visited London, Brighton, Amsterdam, Madrid, and Barcelona together, then my boyfriend and I went on to spend a month in Italy, namely Cortona, Magione, Perugia, and Rome.

Seeing as this was my first trip ever out of the States, I found myself delighted and amazed at all the differences I found in each country. People are people, and they are pretty much the same no matter where you go. It's the little things that make the difference. Each country I visited had a unique way of doing everyday things--I almost got locked inside a public restroom Dublin because I couldn't figure out how to open the door (hint: there's a button you have to push next to the door to release the lock). But I'll keep it at that, because the real fun is discovering all this stuff on your own!!


Each country we traveled to brought a mix of wonder and joy, right alongside a heaping load of confusion and frustration. We spent many, many hours being lost, but after a day or two, we would start to get the hang of things. Once we finally started feeling comfortable, it was off to a new country and the game would begin again.

Now my travels are coming to a close, with just one more city to visit before I settle down in Tuebingen. The fears that kept me awake at night before I left San Francisco are starting to haunt me again...”What am I doing? I won't see my family and friends for a year? I won't see my cat, I won't sleep in my own bed, I won't have my stuff, all my comfortable, familiar stuff, for a YEAR!?!?” But I can't think like that. I have to take it one step at a time, and for now...that step is finding breakfast and a coffee!!

Abbey Road, London...shoes are wrong but was still fun!

Saturday 31 July 2010

Please let me introduce myself...

Ok. So this is my very first blog. Things may be a little shaky for both of us at first. Hang in there.

I am a 33 year old full-time college student. Yes, I said 33. Call me a late bloomer. Call me a procrastinator. Call me someone who takes her time figuring out exactly what she wants to do before jumping in. I vote for #3.

I am currently attending San Francisco State University in San Francisco, CA. I am a Biology major, not sure what I am concentrating in yet, but at least I got the Biology part down. However, one thing I have always wanted to do is travel, and now SF State has provided me that opportunity.

"Study Abroad! It's easier than you think!" This is California State University's slogan splashed across their International Programs website (http://www.calstate.edu/IP/). "Easy" is not the word I would use to describe it. You really have to want it to make it through the mountains of paperwork, essays, letters of recommendation, scholarship applications, meetings, etc. You really have to be a special kind of person to be able to pick up and leave the comfort of your friends, your family, your pets, your job, your own cozy little personal bubble. But if you really want it, you will have the motivation to make it happen!!

But then...there's the money part of it. If you are like me, your parents don't have a lot of money. Maybe they don't even have jobs right now. You don't have a lot of money. You have to work and take out loans just to go to school. This was a major dilemma for me. How do I make my dreams come true when I barely have enough money for rent? Should I really quit my job and go half way across the world to study in this time of global economic crisis?

Well, only you can decide what is right for you, but for me, the answer was scholarships. The Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship program, sponsored by the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs at the U.S. Department of State. The leaders of this program at the Institute of International Education wholeheartedly believe in the importance of international cultural exchange. American students need to be exposed to the ways of the rest of the world in order to keep up with international affairs and compete in today's global economy (please go to http://www.iie.org/en/Programs/Gilman-Scholarship-Program for more information about the Gilman International Scholarship program).

Furthermore, the Gilman Scholarship program focuses on selecting students who would not get the opportunity to study abroad, such as those with financial need, minorities, students with disabilities, and students in less popular fields of study. I, being a very broke Biology major, was one of the students chosen to receive the Gilman International Scholarship this year and now I will spend next year studying at the Universität Tübingen in Tübingen, Germany!!!


So thank you Institute of International Education and Gilman Scholarship, thank you David Wick and Maria Flores (the most amazing study abroad advisors!), thank you friends and family, thank you all for the support and courage it has taken to jump into this study abroad program...Deutschland here I come!!