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The Perspective on Studying Abroad

By Julian Bonte-Friedheim
 unsplash / Samuel Zeller
*Updated 2021
Taking a semester or year to study abroad is an experience that is presented to most college students as a great learning experience. However, universities should also educate their students about potential drawbacks, which can be numerous.
Whether the upsides outweigh the downsides is what we’re about to explore in the following arguments.

 

The Upsides of Studying Abroad

 

It expands your mind

Studying abroad boosts cognitive creativity, self-confidence, communication skills and emotional intelligence. Engaging with different people who have varying mindsets is a great way to learn about new ideas and ways to think. Fully immersing oneself in such a different set of ideas allows people to identify with different backgrounds than their own. Traveling, studying and living abroad is likely to make you more open-minded and less prejudiced.

 

Getting the opportunity to reinvent yourself

How we define ourselves is largely tied to the way we are viewed by the people surrounding us. This natural dynamic makes it harder to change and grow as the process isn’t solely internal. It also requires a change in others’ perceptions of us. Leaving your home country to live abroad provides the opportunity to introduce yourself to people that view you in a new way. They won’t have any preconceived notions about who you are, allowing for a completely fresh perspective of you as a person. This doesn’t mean you’ll become someone else, but it can enable you to take new steps in becoming the person you want to be. Returning home after a long period of absence may offer this same experience once more.

 

It facilitates learning a new language

Learning a second language has been shown to benefit your brain not to mention job prospects, cognitive function as well as self-confidence and happiness. Living and studying abroad are the best ways to practice a new language on a spoken and written level. This allows one to understand the culture and people behind the language. The combination of a university-level language course and daily linguistic interaction in that foreign language’s culture can help students develop a solid grasp on a language.

 

The downsides of studying abroad:

 

Destabilizes your network

A big part of college is fostering a network that will be able to assist you socially as well as career-wise after graduation. This network needs to be nurtured and maintained, which becomes almost impossible while living abroad. New connections made are unlikely to be of use to a student looking for a job back home. Only the minority end up staying in the country they study in, making their network gained there less useful for the majority of students who return home.

 

Higher rate of depression and loneliness among students abroad

Moving to a foreign environment can be difficult to process. It can be highly depressing to live in a new country with no family and few friends. Over a third of American students abroad said that they had trouble functioning in the previous year due to depression according to one study. Leaving home to live abroad can take people out of their comfort zone in a way that is unexpectedly unsettling – especially during an uncertain pandemic era

 

It’s an excuse to party

According to an education advisory board survey, Americans studying abroad were more likely to drink in excess, use drugs and engage in other risky behavior. Environmental and peer influences are possible causes for increase in alcohol consumption. Lower drinking ages of the foreign country and increased independence have been found to correlate with elevated drinking. Additionally, being abroad with a higher incentive to make social bonds can encourage the use of alcohol with which to do so. Being in a foreign environment, with different cultural norms may cause students to neglect their studies in favor of partying.

 

The Bottom Line. Studying abroad can be an amazing opportunity but it can also be a tough experience. Most of all it depends on the student and how well they know themselves. What do you think is the best move for you?

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