Do you really want me to give this a title? I can't come up with titles Past Review

By (Middlebury College) - abroad from 08/27/2019 to 12/13/2019 with

Middlebury Schools Abroad: Middlebury in Moscow

What did you gain/learn from your experience abroad? Was it worthwhile?
I feel like I learned a lot about Russian culture, not like I learned a lot of new customs, but just that I got a good look at how much life can suck there.

Personal Information

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.

Academic rigor and intensity were both less than I expected. Resources I cannot complain about, however.

* Host Country Program Administration

On-site administration of your program

We had some pretty serious difficulties getting our passport visas renewed, which was the administration's responsibility. Some of us received our new passports the very day that the old visa expired, which, to put it lightly, was cutting it close. However, our administrators were at least very kind to us and were clearly trying their best, so I can't rate this very high, but I can't rate it too low either.

* Housing:

How satisfied were you with your living arrangements?

I can't complain about my hostess — she was very generous and clearly tried very hard to make me feel welcome. My complaints are largely personal ones about the distance to the office, but I suspect that that was unavoidable.

* Food:

I don't really get how this relates to the program, but the food in Moscow was fine.

* Social & Cultural Integration:

How integrated did you feel with the local culture?

I felt very Russian when using the metro and walking around, but I felt rather like a sore thumb in my mainstream class and at lunch, and I had a lot of classes with other Americans which isolated me from other Russians as well.

* Health Care:

How well were health issues addressed during the program?

I did not need to visit a doctor for any health issues, but all of my experiences buying toothpaste at pharmacies, for example, were positive. I was unsatisfied with the fact that my host university only offered flu vaccinations on one day that I had a conflict on, but since I returned home in December and got a shot then, I was not too unhappy with this.

* Safety:

I never felt threatened or unsafe in Moscow. I do look like most Russians, though, at least at a glance, so I didn't experience any discrimination, and I strongly suspect that for women and students of color the experience would have been less positive.

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

If I were studying abroad in Russia again, I would go with Middlebury. But I'm not sure I'd study abroad in Russia again.

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)

My living expenses basically amounted to $30 each month for transport on the metro and maybe $100 or $150 each month on lunch. Other meals were provided by my hostess. Rent was $950 each month. I naturally spent more than that each month in total, but in terms of essential expenditures, for an American, Moscow is a cheap city. (It is NOT a cheap city for Russians, though, and do not make the mistake of thinking it is. Don't show off how much buying power you have if you don't want to look like a jerk.)

Not including program expenses, about how much money did you spend on food and other expenses each week? $30
Do you have any general money-saving tips for future study abroad participants? Don't take cabs. Buy an unlimited metro card and use it for everything. It's like $100 up front, but it lasts you three months and it's totally worth it. A good shawarma is about $2.25. Find a few places you like around the city and get on good terms with the shawarmist, and go there whenever you can't get food from the cafeteria. Honestly, even subsidized cafeteria food is usually more expensive than a really good shawarma.

Language

* Did your program have a foreign language component? Yes
How much did the program encourage you to use the language?

0 = No encouragement, 5 = frequent encouragement to use the language

Middlebury has the Language Pledge, so you promise to only use the target language. How well we all stuck to that is a different matter.

How would you rate your language skills at the beginning of the program? Advanced
How would you rate your language skills at the end of the program? Advanced
What was the highest level language course you had completed prior to departure? 700
How many hours per day did you use the language?
Do you have any tips/advice on the best ways to practice the language for future study abroad participants? Make native friends

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

  • Local Students
  • Americans
About how many local friends did you make that you will likely keep in touch with?

A Look Back

* What did you like most about the program?
  • The professors who were good were great
  • Moscow is beautiful for about two weeks in August
  • Everybody was in it together, experiencing the same crazy stuff
* What could be improved?
  • More coffee hours to build community among non-native students
  • Make professors show up on time and not make islamophobic comments
* What do you know now that you wish you knew before going on this program? You have to work a lot harder to make native friends and to do things with them than you expect.

Reasons For Studying Abroad

To help future students find programs attended by like-minded individuals, please choose the profile that most closely represents you.
The Academic or Linguist
You went abroad with specific academic goals in mind; the program credentials and rigor of your coursework abroad were very important to you. You had a great time abroad, but never lost sight of your studies and (if applicable) were diligent with your foreign language study. Good for you!

Individual Course Reviews

Course Name/Rating:

20th-Century Russian Literature

Course Department: Russian
Instructor: Yuri Gevargisovich Bit-Yunan
Instruction Language: Russian
Comments: This course was relatively challenging, although our discussions were more plot-focused than I had anticipated. We did not really make use of the location, but Yuri Gevargisovich was always very well-prepared despite his clearly packed schedule. I believe I participated about as much in this class as I would have at Middlebury. We had a few short papers to write and were assessed based on participation in class.
Credit Transfer Issues: None
Course Name/Rating:

History of Post-Soviet Russia

Course Department: History
Instructor: Sergei Leonidovich Tsybulskiy
Instruction Language: Russian
Comments: This course was sometimes very challenging and sometimes very easy, and I never really knew what to expect. Sergei Leonidovich did try to take advantage of our location and organize interesting field trips, though not always with success. I again participated about as much as in Middlebury. We had a lot of response papers at first, which tailed off, and then a final exam, and that was kind of it for assessments. As for whether Sergei Leonidovich was knowledgeable and well-prepared, well... he clearly knew a lot, but it was often not something that really mattered to the topic at hand. We had a lot of digressions into the politics within the Russian Orthodox Church, and a fair number of... shall we say "strange" comments on Chechens, Muslims, and Ukrainians. And we spent about the first half of the course actually talking about Soviet history, when it seems to have been intended to be the topic for just the first two weeks or so. And I forgot to mention that Sergei Leonidovich was chronically late, often by more than 15 minutes. Organization was clearly a weak point here.
Credit Transfer Issues: None
Course Name/Rating:

Advanced Grammar

Course Department: Russian
Instructor: Evgenia Pavlovna Dudina
Instruction Language: Russian
Comments: This course was not very challenging, but it was nonetheless very helpful in clearing up some finer points of grammar usage. Evgenia Pavlovna was an excellent teacher and was always very well-prepared, and the few times when she couldn't answer our questions it was clear that it was just because the topic was so confusing to even a native speaker that nothing more could have been expected of her anyways. I participated about as often here as I would have in Middlebury. We often had grammar quizzes and there was a final exam, so I believe the assessment scheme was proper for the material.
Credit Transfer Issues: None
Course Name/Rating:

Russian-British Relations

Course Department: History (HSE)
Instructor: Olga Alekseevna Kolykhalova
Instruction Language: Russian
Comments: This course was just not satisfying at all. I was expecting a history course, and instead what I got was basically a tour through the diaries of famous people from either Russia or Britain and their impressions of visiting the other one. This was of course not entirely uninteresting, but we never seemed to be expected to draw any wider conclusions about the nature of relations at the time, and our entire assessment was based on doing presentations on our readings, which were invariably not that interesting because we'd all had to read something on the topic of the presentation anyway.
Credit Transfer Issues: None