Berlin, du bist wunderbar - just like the ads say, Germany enriched my life unforgettably Past Review

By (History and German, Harvard University) for

Duke University: Berlin - Duke in Berlin

What did you gain/learn from your experience abroad? Was it worthwhile?
I became fluent in German, lived in another culture, met new people that I'm still closely in touch with, and want to visit many times for the rest of my life. I might even get a job where I need to speak German. This experience has shaped my personality in a way I'm glad I followed through on.

Personal Information

If you took classes at multiple universities, list those universities here: Humboldt Universität zu Berlin
How much international exposure did you have prior to this program? 1 month - 6 months

Review Your Program

* Overall educational experience

Academic rigor, intensity, resources, etc.

The workload was more moderate and less stressful than on campus, but we still had daily writing and reading assignments to constantly keep us engaged in German study. For Deutsch 119, the advanced course, I wrote upwards of 4 single-spaced pages of journal entries per week, read a German novel and prepared a presentation analyzing it, wrote a midterm and final exam, and wrote a 12-page history research paper in German. This was spread out well over the semester. The 119 class was a seminar with 6 students and the resident director, who engaged with us conversationally and instructed on German grammar and reading/writing abilities while teaching us German history from 1871 to the present. The grading system (this goes for the other two courses as well) was balanced and very much like an American system, divvying up the grades into percentages between the papers, exams, participation, and so forth. I attended some history lectures at the Freie Universität as well, which were larger (~30 students), but still in a seminar and discussion format. It resembled an American system but the scale was larger. Art and architecture history (Kunst 190) was a fantastic course for which I wrote three German research papers between 6-10 pages in length (though most students could option to do the work in English, as above). Aside from lecture, which was like an American lecture but with only 20 students, we had 100-page reading assignments in German handed out each week to prepare the materials, and we went on wonderful excursions around Berlin and Europe (during fall break) to see different neighborhoods and structures firsthand. LIke 119, the workload was spread evenly over the semester, so it wasn't overwhelming. Economics of a United Europe (Ökonomie 060) was also an intimate seminar-style course with 6 students and the professor, who distributed several German newspaper articles and excerpts from economics textbooks every lecture, which we then read to prepare for the next lecture's discussion. We wrote a midterm and final exam, but had no research papers, and we delved into microeconomics to provide context for the socioeconomic issues we discussed about the fate of the EU and its economic policy. The workload wasn't overbearing here either.

* Host Country Program Administration

On-site administration of your program

In all seriousness, my only complaint about this program is that it didn't last longer than a semester for me (though there is the option to study there for a full year, which I unfortunately couldn't do because of requirements on campus I need to fulfill). The faculty were always available by phone or email, very kind and supportive, informative, and also registered as Duke professors (so they're aware of American college culture/standards - some of them also studied in America when they were younger). The program included 20 students this year, but the number can fluctuate between 10 and 30 depending on popularity by year. I always felt safe, informed, and engaged.

* Housing:

How satisfied were you with your living arrangements?

Housing is arranged through the Duke Global Education Office, which has an online portal linked to the Berlin program and the faculty in Germany. Questionnaires try to match students to the best match - some had bad luck where they didn't necessarily mesh, but the resident director was also very accommodating and moved some students around who wanted new hosts (and were then satisfied). I was blessed to have a very loving young family. Ulrich and Frieda are in their 30s, have three little children, and live in Lichterfelde West, an upper-middle-class neighborhood in Southwest Berlin. The neighborhood was safe, pretty (but the cobblestones make driving a bumpy adventure), and city transit was within a 10-minute walk. I could get to the city center anywhere between 30 minutes to one hour, never had trouble having a great nightlife, and always felt safe. Like any big city, I'm sure there are occasional crimes and assault that you hear about in the paper, but I only heard about it maybe once in my time there, and in a different neighborhood. I never felt in danger, and the train was always packed with people, no matter the hour. Host families are required to provide a bed with sheets and pillow, a desk, a dresser, and breakfast. My family took it another step and gave me food all the time, be it lunch or dinner. They invited me out with them when they had family hangouts, and they integrated me like a kind of older son/cousin/uncle figure to the kids.

* Food:

Döner is incredible. A Turkish specialty (vegetarian options available) with lamb or chicken, salad, sauces, and a pita-like bread. It's cheap and delicious. Mustafa's at Mehringdamm and Cebo's at Rathaus Steglitz are the best in the city, and cost between 2.80 and 2.90 euros. Nollendorfplatz has amazing restaurants, a wide variety and good prices. Potsdamer Platz is too commercial but has some good Mexican and Italian restaurants, and there's a good Thai restaurant at Mexikoplatz.

* Social & Cultural Integration:

How integrated did you feel with the local culture?

For fall break the program travels together with faculty to Görlitz (on the Polish border, with a stop in Poland), Dresden and Prague. Then there are 10 days to travel around Europe as you please, and students would travel on weekends. We had a constant stream of cultural events, between soccer matches, museum events, theater plays, dances, etc. Nightlife in Berlin was incredible and nocturnal - I've never experienced something quite like it.

* Health Care:

How well were health issues addressed during the program?

* Safety:

As stated above, Berlin was a very safe city. Obviously one should usually have one buddy to travel around with in unfamiliar places and at night, but I would commute home at night or come home from clubbing very late and felt safe except one time (a teenager tried to harass me on the train, but I directly engaged the full train car of commuters to help me shoo him away and get me a taxi late at night). That one situation didn't happen to anyone else, and it really is a safe city (I'm from New York and felt just as safe). I never went to the doctor, though we have a program physician and the option to buy German healthcare for a few hundred bucks. Nobody had severe issues, just typical colds and such. I didn't need any vaccinations in particular (though you should be caught up on everything with your physician anyway), and there weren't any health problems. Granted, Germany had an E. Coli problem with lettuce and tomatoes in the summer of 2011, but that problem was no longer present when I was there.

If you could do it all over again would you choose the same program? Yes

Finances

* Money: How easily were you able to live on a student's budget?

(1 = not very easy/$200+ on food & personal expenses/week, 2.5 = $100/week, 5 = very easily/minimal cost)

Not including program expenses, about how much money did you spend on food and other expenses each week? I tried to budget myself at roughly 200 Euros every two weeks, though I would regularly go over or under. Your host family will provide some food and Berlin is relatively a very cheap city compared to Paris, London, etc. Then there's booking flights or trains around Europe (but flights are cheaper) for different visits you want to do on your own time, so it added up to anywhere between 4 and 5,000 dollars and airfare and such.
Do you have any general money-saving tips for future study abroad participants? Go to Aufsturz on Oranienburgerstraße for well-priced and wide varieties of beer, and any food/alcohol in corner stores is very cheap. Never go to American/international bars, and stick to local/German stuff. I can't think of any upsetting surprises in terms of expenses.

Language

* Did your program have a foreign language component? Yes
How would you rate your language skills at the beginning of the program? None
Language acquisition improvement?

My time abroad solidified my fluency in German - between living with a German host family that spoke to me in German always, as well as writing in German and participating in class in German, there was continuous exposure. I also had a Sprachpartner, a 29-year-old local (different young adults/adults volunteer to become language partners who have done it for the program before) that I hung out with, went out at night with, and always spoke to in German. That being said, students can get by just fine without any German at all, if they wished. Two students had never taken any German, but took introductory courses and became conversational by the end of the semester. In Berlin especially, most people will have some grasp of English, so getting by isn't hard.

If applicable, to what degree did your living situation aid your language acquisition?

Other Program Information

* Where did you live?

Select all that apply

  • Host Family
* Who did you live with?

Select all that apply

  • Host Family
* Who did you take classes with?

Select all that apply

  • Americans

A Look Back

* What did you like most about the program?
  • Well-organized and led by the faculty
  • Berlin is the center of Europe and has much to offer
  • Educational but very fun
* What could be improved?
  • n/a
* What do you know now that you wish you knew before going on this program? This program is very accommodating to people who've never looked at German and those who are advanced in it. They also handle your visa application and lead you through everything, so you really can't go wrong with it.

Individual Course Reviews

Course Name/Rating:

Deutsch 119

Course Department: German department, 119
Instructor: Professor Jochen Wohlfeil
Instruction Language: German
Comments: As stated above, the course wasn't challenging but very engaging and enjoyable. I never felt overwhelmed, but I learned a tremendous amount of German history and improved my German skills to an extent not normally available back home at school. One of the great things about this course is that it ran in tandem with the art course, so that we learned about art and architectural history on these time periods and then did excursions to the relevant sites in Berlin. Professor Wohlfeil was a treasure trove of historical information and personal cultural experiences and kept seminar very active.
Credit Transfer Issues: With this course I had no transfer issues.
Course Name/Rating:

Economics of a United Europe

Course Department: Economics, 060
Instructor: Professor Michael Tolksdorf
Instruction Language: German (but he also accommodated students with less German experience)
Comments: Professor Tolksdorf is an economics whiz. Having served two terms in German government contributing to economic policy, as well as having founded the Berlin School of Economics, he brought a lot of wisdom, experience, and information to our bi-weekly sessions. The course was never intimidating, because he explained the material well (and learning economics in German was a real treat having studied it in English). The midterm and final were more challenging than those of the other two courses, but still manageable.
Credit Transfer Issues: I had no transfer credit issues.
Course Name/Rating:

Architecture, Art and History, 1800 to the Present

Course Department: Art History, 190
Instructor: Professor Matthias Pabsch
Instruction Language: German
Comments: Art history with Professor Pabsch was a joy. His knowledge of history and art history, not only of Berlin and Germany, but honestly any epoch and from many countries, is astounding. From the top of his head he conducted very precise lectures filled with more detail, anecdotes, and other fun facts than I've normally seen from a professor, and that's without mentioning the very entertaining excursions he led throughout Berlin, Görlitz, Dresden and Prague.
Credit Transfer Issues: I've been having large transfer credit issues with this course, which though frustrating, can hopefully be resolved. As a history and German student I thought all three of the courses I enrolled in (German 119 is double credit) engaged effectively with my fields of study, but the history department thought art history didn't satisfy their original requirements. As a result, I arranged an independent study project with Professor Pabsch on the Berliner Stadtschloss, the Hohenzollern palace torn down in 1950. My work amounted to the same work I did for the 2 papers the whole class had to write, including research on the history (Zeitgeist and aesthetics of the building) that I wrote a third paper on.