Anonymous wrote:Go for it! Although I just want to add a different perspective. I'm on the board for my college. Most colleges have realized that the semester or preferably "year abroad" is a money maker for the school. If the college can urge every student to do it - as we are doing, then you can run five years of students through the campus every four years. In other words, we can scoop up another full year's worth of tuition x 3,000 students without building more dorms. And in most situations, deals are struck so that a good portion of the $60K coming in the door for the student is mostly retained by the college or university. So schools are often not offering this with the best intentions - so investigate the program thoroughly. If your school is just dumping you in Germany without thought, plan or academic mission, then it's a financial game for the school. Similarly, we realized we were losing money on room and board because students moved off campus ASAP, so now have a three-year residency requirement in triples and quads. ASK A LOT OF QUESTIONS. But, otherwise, go for it! A great opportunity if the college runs the program well.
Interesting persective. I went to a small private liberal arts college and all of my classes abroad counted for credits I needed so I still was able to graduate in 3.5 years despite a semester abroad. After I graduated, my school did stop off campus housing unless you have "special permission".