Study Abroad in Paris Past Review

By (East Asian studies and Economics, Wellesley College) for

Sciences Po: Paris - Direct Enrollment & Exchange

What did you gain/learn from your experience abroad? Was it worthwhile?
it was worthwhile in the sense that i got to spend time in Paris. I just didn't particularly like the type of education I received.

Personal Information

How much international exposure did you have prior to this program? 6 months+
The term and year this program took place: Spring 2010

Review Your Program

* Overall educational experience

Academic rigor, intensity, resources, etc.

Courses require the regurgitation of information in contrast with any analysis. In addition, there were a number of courses in which I received no feedback on grading prior to the final exam.

* Host Country Program Administration

On-site administration of your program

they weren't particularly helpful

* Housing:

How satisfied were you with your living arrangements?

i lived with another american student that i found through a friend of a friend in the 6th <br /><br /> the apartment in which i lived was quite nice and in a good district in paris and not too far from school

* Food:

french food is amazing

* Social & Cultural Integration:

How integrated did you feel with the local culture?

sciences po doesn't offer much outside of school. the bureau DES eleves occasionally through parties, but that was the extent

* Health Care:

How well were health issues addressed during the program?

* Safety:

there are certainly areas to avoid in Paris, but overall where i was was quite safe.

If you could do it all over again would you choose the same program? No

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? €300/week plus €500 in rent/month
Do you have any general money-saving tips for future study abroad participants? there weren't really any that i didn't anticipate, but the cost of living in general was a lot higher than i expected, which the exchange rate didn't help

Language

How would you rate your language skills at the beginning of the program? Beginner
What was the highest level language course you had completed prior to departure? French 349
If applicable, to what degree did your living situation aid your language acquisition?

Direct Enrollment/Exchange

* Did you study abroad through an exchange program or did you directly enroll in the foreign university? Exchange

Other Program Information

* Where did you live?

Select all that apply

  • Apartment
* Who did you live with?

Select all that apply

  • Americans
* Who did you take classes with?

Select all that apply

  • International Students

A Look Back

* What do you know now that you wish you knew before going on this program? get there early so that you can find housing

Individual Course Reviews

Course Name/Rating:

globalisation, les etats, et les marche financier

Course Department: no idea
Instructor: Francois Rachline
Instruction Language: French
Comments: the lecture was relatively interesting and inciteful with regards to today's economy. However, the discussion section attached to the course was an absolute waste of time and "taught" entirely by student presentations
Credit Transfer Issues: I don't know yet, but the economics department indicated that I shouldn't

Comments

I regret that you did not feel that you were prepared by Wellesley for your semester in Paris, but I also feel the need to point out that you were in China during the fall semester and were not able to attend the pre-departure meetings organized on campus. That said, the program really is best students for students who do not need a lot of support. Jennifer Thomas-Starck Director of International Study

Wellesley June 02, 2010

I am sure i did fine with the semester, and i did split time for the pre departure meetings with both France and china in the spring of last year. Granted, I may not have gotten everything out of it, but I did . In the end, I did fine, and was able to make everything work. However, despite this, I believe that Wellesley should have given more support and guidance to students who are appearing in a foreign country with next to no support. I understand the difference between this and and the program that I did in China, and the fact that that program had a lot more support. I just felt that it would have been useful to have more guidance for things such as finding housing (resources you could use), things to expect, and I think that the OIS should have made it clear that they would pay for the program, which I only learned later and had no reason to expect that it would, given that Wellesley has made it perfectly clear that only tuition costs were covered by Wellesley. I apologize for not being more clear in my assessment. However, I feel that Wellesley should provide more resources and guidance to students who are going to a foreign country in which they will be fending for themselves. Despite everything, I truly did enjoy my time in Paris, but for reasons that were not listed in abroad101s questions, and I recognize that while I most definitely do not prefer the teaching meathods of the Sciences Po to Wellesley, there were definitely things to have been learned from my experience here. I will also comment that the student body at the Sciences Po as well as other students abroad that Ive talked to offer the same critiques of the education system that I have, and that they are working on changing them, specifically to add more discussion and analysis to classes. I also have one more thing to add. I was required to attend meetings on how to deal with standing out in Asia, which, quite honestly, I did not find particularly useful to my time there. While a number of the incites were interesting, they did not offer much that was either not said in the original pre departure meetings or that is not common sense for people who have previously done a lot of traveling, which I have. I also noted that there was not a meeting of this type held for people who went to a European country. While I concede that blending in to the majority of the population and social norms is easier here, perhaps another meeting or at least an extensive reference guide could be put together for students who are going to have to, as a necessity of where they are attending school, have to cope with more factors of living abroad, such as finding an apartment, dealing with utilities, insurance, opening a bank account and the steps by which to do that and paperwork needed. I agree that the Paris program is best for people who do not need support, but I wholeheartedly believe that Wellesley should have provided more than it did and given us a better idea of what to expect. The pre departure meeting I attended was nearly entirely taken up with discussion regarding the Aix en Provence program and, while I recognize that many more students take part in that program than the Sciences Po's, there needs to be equal support for both and equal information provided for both, especially due to the circumstances of Sciences Po, and, the fact that coming in the 2nd semester, regardless of where I was before, makes it next to impossible to find housing at one of the student quarters located in the city. I do not feel that Wellesley did this, and, as a result, left its students in Paris to fend for themselves, even to the extent of using the resources of other schools to figure out what needs to be done once in-country.

lmcgraw June 02, 2010