Posts Tagged ‘studyabroad’

You can’t commute from across the world

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2025
Lugano, Switzerland

If I had to give one piece of advice to students entering college, commuting or not, it would be to study abroad. 

I give this advice with adequate experience as I have studied abroad twice. During my sophomore year (Fall 2023) I spent a semester in the Netherlands. Emerson College has a unique program called Kastell Well. In this program you live in a castle in a rural part of the country close to Germany. The medieval castle was beautiful and the surrounding village was full of kind people and many small farms. We travelled practically every weekend to different European cities, so coming back to the peaceful Dutch countryside was a respite. 

Kasteel Well. The Netherlands campus of Emerson College

I loved being abroad so much, but the castle was Emerson’s main program. There are many other shorter ones but I wanted to get more credits out of the trip. Luckily we have an expansive abroad department. Through some quick research I discovered Emerson was involved in exchange programs with different schools. I applied for two, one in Spain and one in Switzerland. Ultimately I decided to only continue with my Switzerland application and a few months into my junior year I discovered I was chosen to participate in the exchange program. In the second half of my junior year (Spring 2025) I went to Europe again, this time staying in Lugano, Switzerland. Lugano is named after the large lake the city resides on, Lake Lugano. It is beautiful and surrounded by mountains. The everyday view I had walking to classes was unreal. Switzerland has three different national languages, German, French, and Italian, these are based on what part of Switzerland you reside in. My temporary school, Franklin University, was in the Italian region. Lugano was extremely close to Italy, and we found ourselves going often. 

Being abroad was the best experience of my life. I travelled all of the time; by the end of my two semesters I had visited 14 European countries, some more than once. I had been to museums that I learned about as a child and saw artifacts from history books. I saw the paintings and actual brush strokes on the canvas of Van Gogh and Rembrandt.  

I made friends from all over the world. I hiked a mountain by myself and ate pasta in Italy and pierogies in Poland. Basically, it was an unreal experience that I couldn’t have gotten any other way. 

Both of the times I was abroad there was academic travel. We would go with professors to see what we were learning about. At Emerson we went to Amsterdam and Prague. At Franklin I went to Sicily for my organized crime class– it was a highlight of my trip. Being able to see firsthand the monuments and documents you learned about, even if they are in a different language, is so unbelievably amazing. 

In general getting an international education shifts your perspective. You learn different teaching styles and focus on different aspects of the material. 

While the classroom is so important abroad, it is the life lessons that you learn. Especially when commuting. Commuting makes it hard to become an individual. Yes you are an adult now, but you are an adult that still goes to school and lives at home. Sometimes it is hard to separate that from highschool. Being in a country on your own is the highest level of independence. You aren’t even in the same time zone as your family! 

Studying abroad is transformative. You have to learn how to navigate buses, trains, airports, most of which are in different languages. You have to learn how to communicate and adapt to different social norms. By studying abroad you gain crucial life skills that you can’t learn without experiencing it.  

As a commuter going to a different country may seem like a giant step, and it is. But it is worth it. I was nervous both times I left to go abroad, and despite how badly I wanted to, I cried, both times. Once I was on the plane though, it was just a matter of time until I would be back home, so I was determined to make the most of it. 

Once you get there it is like freshman year moving into the dorms again. Everyone is trying to find friends. As a commuter you may not have experienced the chaos of the first week of freshman year, but you find your friends fast from it. Everyone is in the same boat. 

If you have ever wanted to see what the dorm life was like, study abroad. It is easier to justify than a dorm that is drivable distance from your home. Sometimes, at least in my case, it costs less than living on campus. It is also much better than housing because you are in a different country. 

Different schools have different housing abroad, but either way you will be living more independently. 

Most schools have extensive abroad lists and there are many scholarships! It may seem impossible, but truly it is so doable. Going abroad cost just as much, possibly cheaper, than when I lived on campus. 

I believe it is the perfect way to get out there and explore the world and yourself. Everyone is in the same boat as you, so trust me you will find your crowd. 


By Isabel DeSisto

Isabel DeSisto is a senior majoring in Writing, Literature, and Publishing at Emerson College. She is an avid traveler and is always looking to go on a trip. While adventurous, there is nothing she enjoys more than hanging out with her dogs and reading a book.


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My Second Internship: The Highs and Lows of Interning Abroad

Tuesday, April 20th, 2021

In October of my sophomore year, I applied for a semester abroad at NYU Madrid. At the same time, I submitted an application for the for-credit internship program there. In November, I had a Skype interview with the director of EUSA, a separate company NYU hires to run many of its abroad internship programs. During this meeting, we discussed the fields of work I was interested in, and she evaluated my level of Spanish fluency.

When I arrived in Madrid, I received an email notifying me that I had an interview in two days with the European Foundation of Society and Education, an education policy think tank. The interview process was a whirlwind. A few days before, I was pickpocketed at a nightclub, and my phone was stolen. To make it to my interview without a cell phone, I had to purchase an alarm clock and memorize the route to the office. Luckily, the foundation was in the city center and not the outskirts of Madrid, but I still had to transfer trains and ask for directions on the street. 

My neighborhood in Madrid

I was nervous because the placement information made the office sound like a strict and formal environment. However, I was greeted by a charming old man. He reminded me of a kindly grandpa as he offered me a cup of coffee and complimented me on my success at NYU. His name was Miguel Ángel, the President of the foundation. It wasn’t even a real interview; we just worked out my schedule and got to know each other. 

Contrary to my preconceived assumptions, the foundation was casual and friendly. I ended up wearing jeans every day. It was also customary to say “hola” and “adiós” to every person individually when you arrived and left each day. I even remember a coworker apologizing profusely one afternoon because she hadn’t said hello to me when she came in. 

The work was a mix of administrative tasks, translating, social media management, and research analysis. I also went to a required weekly class at NYU Madrid for the students in the internship program, which involved various projects including a capstone research paper at the end of the semester. The most challenging part was reading quantitative research papers that the foundation published in Spanish, then writing my analysis (in Spanish) in a blog post. It seems I did okay, though, as Miguel Ángel submitted two of my articles to a Spanish newspaper.

My article on civic education, published in the Spanish newspaper Magisterio.

Every morning, Miguel Ángel would ask me about my classes, exams, and weekend trips. These conversations were almost always interesting, as Spanish people tend to speak about personal topics more openly in the office than we do in the U.S. For example, I mentioned once that I had been baptized as a Catholic, and Miguel Ángel was so excited to tell me all about the importance of that sacrament.

At the end of the semester, the foundation invited me back for a goodbye party with coffee and snacks. They even bought me a Zara bag as a thank-you gift. I was sad to leave. I had genuinely enjoyed my time in the office, with its floor-to-ceiling bookshelves, terrace for drinking coffee, and genial coworkers. However, when people ask if I recommend doing an internship during your semester abroad, the answer isn’t so simple.

Even now, after all of this reflecting, I still don’t know the answer. I am sure it looked impressive on my resume—job experience in a foreign country and in a foreign language. I could now prove my Spanish proficiency to future employers. I wrote about my work at the foundation in numerous cover letters and personal statements. For years, it has served as a unique experience that I can draw upon when promoting myself for a new job or academic program. More so, being a “working professional” in Madrid made me feel like I actually lived there, that I wasn’t just a typical study abroad student. 

At the same time, I don’t believe I was fully ready for the transition to life in Spain. I left my closest friends and family in New York to study in a program where I barely knew anyone. Then, I filled my schedule with classes and my for-credit, unpaid internship hours, so I didn’t often have time to connect with other students. For them, their time abroad was an “easy semester” where they slept in, went to clubs on weeknights, and traveled every weekend. Meanwhile, I was shut in my room during the week, trying to finish my homework in the little free time I had after work. I rarely succeeded—I constantly felt that I was behind in my classes. I still got to travel extensively, and I had the most lovely time jet-setting across Europe. But I was so tired, so anxious, and my support system was across the ocean. I wonder what would have happened if I had spent those 16 hours a week (plus transportation time) taking care of myself rather than working in an office without getting paid.

Interning as a student is a learning process. In Madrid, I learned that it is okay to take a step back from work when you need to. Being a student and being a human are jobs too. Despite my struggles, I do not regret my time at the foundation. I challenged myself, and growth always comes from facing challenges.


By Marisa Bianco

Marisa graduated from NYU in May 2020, summa cum laude, with degrees in International Relations and Spanish. She grew up in Nebraska, but she is currently living in Córdoba, Spain, where she works as an English teacher. You can find her eating tapas in the Spanish sun while likely stressing about finding her life’s purpose.


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