Amazing Pamplona! Past Review

By (Journalism, Spanish, University of Missouri - Columbia) for

Universidad Pública de Navarra: Pamplona - Direct Enrollment & Exchange

What did you gain/learn from your experience abroad? Was it worthwhile?
I completely fell in love with northern Spain, which was nothing like I had expected. My Spanish and understanding of Spanish culture improved a lot, and, although I didn't think it possible, the whole experience made me want to travel, eat, and experience the world even more than before! (I am hoping to become a travel journalist).

Review Photos

Direct Enrollment: Pamplona - University of Navarra Photo Direct Enrollment: Pamplona - University of Navarra Photo Direct Enrollment: Pamplona - University of Navarra Photo Direct Enrollment: Pamplona - University of Navarra Photo Direct Enrollment: Pamplona - University of Navarra Photo

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.

Everything depends on the classes you pick and the relationships you establish with your professors. For my university I had to take journalism classes in Spanish, which can quickly make the workload harder. However, the classes that I ended up picking, such as Visual Communications, were not more difficult than my classes at home. The courses taught in English are mostly ridiculously easy. I enjoyed the Introduction to Linguistics class taught in English, but it was one of the easiest classes I've taken in college. Even for the harder classes, if you keep in touch with the professors and give everything a reasonable and honest try, you will probably not fail.

* Host Country Program Administration

On-site administration of your program

My home university's advising office was excellent. Although some things came up with credits etc that we were unprepared for initially, they were great at being accessible to me and knew a lot of little useful details for me.

* Housing:

How satisfied were you with your living arrangements?

I lived in an apartment with another American girl, an Italian guy, and a Spanish woman who was our landlady. Sometimes the four of us had a lot of fun together, other times I got annoyed by a little too much in-your-face Latin culture. Also, I ended up paying more than most of my friends did for similar apartments. The location was excellent, safe and close to the university. We didn't have to buy any bedware or cookware, everything was already there and in great condition.

* Food:

Spanish food is fantastic! It's better if you like seafood and/or pork, but there's a huge variety and I think everyone can find something they enjoy. Restaurants are pretty cheap so there's a big going-out culture.

* Social & Cultural Integration:

How integrated did you feel with the local culture?

To my mind there was tons to do in and around Pamplona - more than enough to fill a semester! Every weekend there was something going on - a Club de Montana excursion, a seafood festival or medieval market downtown, sports day at university where you could play paintball etc, and so on. Travelling, both across Spain and just within Navarra and the Basque Country, is highly recommended. People are partying pretty much every night at the various clubs throughout Pamplona - you'll never be the only one out on the street. Although summertime is supposed to be fiesta time, even in the fall and winter there were several festivals in Pamplona where you could see traditional dances, parades of giants, etc.

* Health Care:

How well were health issues addressed during the program?

* Safety:

Pamplona is a very safe city. I don't remember anyone having any problems at all with theft/robbery/assault etc. The university didn't do a great job of explaining what we should do if we got sick, and I was glad that neither I nor anyone I knew became sick enough to need a doctor while there. That said I think there is some plan for if you do need one, and Spain has fine medical facilities so it probably wouldn't be a big issue.

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)

Language

* Did your program have a foreign language component? Yes
If applicable, to what degree did your living situation aid your language acquisition?

Language acquisition improvement?

Some of my friends barely spoke Spanish, and they managed. That said, I constantly wondered how. I think knowing Spanish infinitely enriched my friendships and other interactions. All of my classes except one were taught in Spanish, and I was one of only 2 international students that enrolled in those classes. I also lived with Spanish speakers. Through all of this my Spanish improved a lot.

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

  • Other

A Look Back

* What did you like most about the program?
  • Location
  • Cuisine
  • The City Itself
* What could be improved?
  • Very little
* What do you know now that you wish you knew before going on this program? What I loved most was the diversity. Navarra is a tiny state but is full of incredible nature - to east the Pyrenees, to north and west smaller mountains filled with sweet Basque villages and caves (and you can hop over a few miles of the Basque Country to reach the Cantabrian sea!), to south there are two amazing castles (Olite and Javier), a dozen monasteries, and the Bardenas Reales desert formations that make you think you've landed on Mars. If you prefer cities, within two hours, you can see Zaragoza, Vitoria, Bilbao, San Sebastian, Biarritz, etc... Navarra is caught in a sort of crossroads of cultures, in the same way Spain is, but more compact. :) In the architecture, in the amazing cuisine, in the fiestas, in the way people speak, you can see the effects of both 'traditional, southern/central Spain', and the Basques. You have to try Pintxos (our version of tapas), and the chocolate pastries from Beatriz!

Individual Course Reviews

Course Name/Rating:

Basque/Euskera

Course Department:
Instructor:
Instruction Language: Spanish
Comments: This was a really fun class for me to take while I was in Pamplona. I studied the Basque language which is spoken in the north of Spain and is not related to any other language on earth. I could only have taken such a class during my study abroad time, and it was interesting from a linguistic and a cultural perspective. It was a small class so I was able to participate and interface with the teacher and other students more than in the lectures.
Credit Transfer Issues: This class is essentially useless as transfer credit - if you are in Spain you are probably already maxed out on foreign language credit. As it's taught in a subsection of the university it didn't transfer for me at all, it might have if I had pushed the issue but there was no point.