Fall 2025: Paris, France - English program |
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This program is closed. Please contact the faculty director for more information. |
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Meetings | |
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Program Notes | |
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Program Description | |
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Program Courses | |
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Students must enroll in all credit-bearing courses for a grade. Only the UNIV (zero credit) course may be taken pass/fail. Audit registration is not permitted on UD Travel Study. Please refer to the University Catalog to verify requirements and prerequisites |
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All students must enroll in at least 12 credits, as well as the 0-credit UNIV course. |
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The courses below have been pre-approved for UD students participating on this program. Although these courses may be offered in Paris during Fall Semester, the final course list is typically not announced until late May. The courses below are not guaranteed, and enrollment in specific courses can be competitive. Students should select at least 8-10 potential courses.
All course instruction is in English except for French language courses, and classes are populated by other U.S. students participating CEA's program. Students must enroll in 4-5 courses (12-15 credits) for a letter grade (no auditing or pass/fail). One French course OR COMM 263 is required, in addition to 3-4 other courses.
Students wishing to enroll in a French course will take a preliminary placement exam online prior to departure, followed by an on-site oral examination upon arrival to finalize placement.
FOR PROGRAM INORMATION OR TO APPLY CLICK HERE.
Important Note - Course Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment Status
If a course you are interested is noted as under review/not available for enrollment this means that the course has to be re-reviewed by the academic department to determine the UD equivalent. It is possible that the UD equivalent may change from what is currently posted. Once the course has been reviewed the "under review" status will be removed and the course details listed is the most up to date. |
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ART 180-073: Digital Photography for Non-Majors (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: PHT 301 Photography in Paris |
Introduces the basics of photography as a way to communicate ideas emphasizing content, composition, and technique. Examines contemporary artists and historic movements through research, gallery visits and lectures. Using a digital camera and visual editing software students create, edit and critique images.
When taught in Paris, the course focuses on how the camera can be used in a foreign environment as an exciting tool of documentary record, cross-cultural understanding, artistic expression and self-discovery. After an introduction to the fundamentals of photography, both traditional and digital, students' cameras will be trained on the city of Paris and the personal experiences absorbed here including the architecture, history, people, and rich culture. As students develop their technical, compositional and critical skills they will create a portfolio of images that will both showcase and celebrate your whole unforgettable study abroad experience. |
Satisfies the following requirements: |
| University Arts/Humanities Breadth |
| Arts and Sciences - Group A |
Restrictions: open to non-majors |
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ARTH 228-070: Modern Art Since 1900 (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: ARH 330 - 20th Century Art: A History of Modernism |
Modern art from 1900 to the present considered globally and studied in its social and historical context, including painting, collage, sculpture, photography, performance, installation, institutional critique, and time-based media. |
Satisfies the following requirements: |
| University History Breadth |
| Arts and Sciences - Group B |
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ARTH 321-070: Great Cities of the World (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: ARH 420 - History of Paris: An Architectural Perspective |
Focus on a single city over time or in a specific historical moment. Looks at art, architecture and/or material culture. Topics vary. Examples: Nineteenth Century Paris; Ancient Pompeii; Florence under the Medici; Mexico City c. 1521. |
Satisfies the following requirements: |
| Arts and Sciences - Group A |
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ARTH 367-070: Impressionism and Post-Impressionism (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: ARH 430 19th Century Art: Impressionism and Post-Impressionism |
This course does not count toward ARTH junior seminar, but it can count toward ARTH electives.
In this course in Paris, you will be engaged in an in-depth analysis and pictorial survey of one of the most remarkable and creative phases in modern art: the emergence of Impressionism and Post-Impressionism. In the Louvre, Orsay, Marmottan, and Rodin museums, you will study the original paintings and sculptures of that colorful, creative and revolutionary group of artists that included Monet, Manet, Renoir, Degas, Cezanne, Van Gogh, Gauguin, Seurat, Toulouse-Lautrec and Pissarro. Throughout this exploration, you will seek to understand the impact these and related artists had, not only on late 19th century and later 20th century artistic creativity, but also on the socio-political European—and particularly French—order from which they sprang. And to measure and evaluate the impressive legacy of Impressionism and Post-Impressionism, you will analyze in situ the many great masterpieces these movements generated and consider how they came to represent both a sharp break with the past and a harbinger of the future modernist work yet to come. ONLY OFFERED FALL |
Prerequisite: none |
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BMEG 230-070: Circuits, Signals and Systems for Biomedical Applications *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: ENGR 340 - Electrical Circuits |
Introduction to electrical engineering principles applied to biological systems, using MATLAB and LTspice. Course details basic engineering concepts that underlie biomedical systems and signal analysis.
In Paris, this course will guide you through the basic principles of ideal linear time-invariant electrical circuits and will provide you with the main tools for a full comprehension of their behavior. The basic circuit elements will be explained, together with the main laws deriving from their connection. The main methods for circuit analysis, efficiently merging the information on circuit components, and circuit topology will be introduced and described. |
Prerequisite: MATH 242 |
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BUAD 364-070: Business Administration in Practice *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: INT 423 International Internship: the Multicultural Workplace |
Internship in a business-related field. Includes preparation of a journal of activities and a final project.
When offered abroad, this course is comprised of both a practical internship field component of 20 hours/week and a reflective and theoretical seminar component that together, are purposefully designed to challenge stuents to learn, to engage with, and develop fluency working within a multicultural context, while also strengthening the business competencies necessary to succeed in today’s workplace. Perhaps even more important, the course will cover areas vital to new graduates: job searching, how to present oneself and leveraging one's global and intercultural fluency. |
Restrictions: Enrollment contingent upon timely internship application and successful interview with sponsoring organization. |
Note: Internship placement requires an additional fee of $300. |
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BUAD 384-072: Global Business Environment (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: BUS 320 International Business |
Survey the multidimensional influence of globalization on principles and practices of business. Analyze institutional, cultural, political, legal, economic, social, and technological aspects of international business activities. Assess interdisciplinary frameworks to help align professional goals and personal competencies with the interconnected business world. |
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BUAD 473: Consumer Behavior (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: MKT 310 - Consumer Behavior |
Explores a variety of topics including: the decision processes associated with buying, consuming, and disposing of products, services, and ideas; social, cultural, and psychological influences on consumer decision making and consumption patterns; the relationship between consumer behavior and marketing decision making. |
Prerequisite: BUAD 301 |
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CIEG 211-070: Statics *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: ENGR 380 Statics |
Analysis of force systems and equilibrium of rigid bodies in two and three dimensions. Determination of centers of gravity and of centroids. Analysis of statistically determinate trusses, simple frames and "machines." Introduction to the analysis of beams.
When taught in Paris, This course guides students through statics for engineering, the branch of mechanics that analyzes the forces and torques of bodies in equilibrium. Statics defines quantities such as the moment of a force, the centroid, and moments of inertia that describe how structures and bodies can remain at rest or maintain a constant velocity. Students will learn about trusses, joints, frames, and machines. Students will learn to understand the use of forces and moments and how these combine to achieve equilibrium. As a tool for engineering, statics will provide you with the methods to design structures capable of supporting and moving loads safely and effectively from beams to bridges. The course includes two- and three-dimensional force systems, moments, equivalent systems; trusses, frames, machines; centroids, centers of mass, moments of inertia, friction, internal axial and shear forces, and engineering applications.
NOTE: MEEG has approved that ENGR380CDG taught in Paris will fulfill the MEEG 210 requirement. |
Prerequisite: Calculus I (MATH 241) or equivalent |
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COMM 167-071: Mass Media and the Fashion Industry (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: COM 321 Mass Media and the Fashion Industry |
Department elective. |
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COMM 263-070: Communicative Behavior and Culture (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: COM 340 CDG - Communication and Global Competence |
Communicative processes in other cultures as well as subcultures in the US will be discussed. Students will become more mindful and aware of their own cultural patterns as well. Difficulties in cross cultural communication will also be discussed. |
Satisfies the following requirements: |
| Multicultural |
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COMM 267-071: Mass Media and the Fashion Industry (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: COM 321 Mass Media and the Fashion Industry |
In this course, students will explore the relationship between mass media and the fashion industry from 19th century Paris to today's new media platforms and globalized communication networks. And while the fashion industry provides an arena for conventional media business it also involves a coded and complex dialogue among creators, corporations, tastemakers and the masses. The first half of the course addresses therefore the primary forms of conventional fashion media (journalism, photography, film, new media) while the second half of the course emphasizes the media dialogue and diplomacy a well as its value arbitration (representation, taste, status, trend, globalization). As an integral part of this course, students will consider the various interactions between fashion and media by personally conducting interviews or fashion show reports along with a trend analysis in order to gain practical experience in the ways of fashion journalism. The course includes a shared blog component for posting of assignments and critiques of your visits to fashion industry headquarters or exhibitions. |
Prerequisite: Introductory courses in Communication or Media Studies are advised |
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FASH 224-070: Clothing Design and Production: 1600 to the Edwardian Period *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: ARH 361 Haute Couture in Paris: History of Style & Fashion |
Clothing design and production in America and Western Europe since 1600. Study of craft skills, growth of ready-to-wear industry, and Haute Couture.
When taught in Paris, this course is designed as a survey of the past 200 years of designing, making, wearing and commenting upon the clothes we wear. It begins by tracing out the origins of Haute Couture by threading its way back into late 17th century aristocratic circles and their social customs of dress. This historical exploration continues by analyzing the fabric of 18th and 19th century bourgeois mentality, sensibility and insecurity. Taken together, these early fashion and stylistic efforts help students unravel the complexities and diverse impulses of 20th century fashion designers and their creations. This course will also focus on the many benchmarks in women's fashion - the liberation from the corset, the introduction of pants into the women's wardrobe of fashion, the challenge to the textile industry with the arrival of mini-skirts and the explosive impact of the bikini. |
Prerequisite: one 20th century European history course recommended |
Satisfies the following requirements: |
| University History Breadth |
| Arts and Sciences - Group B |
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FREN 105-070: French I: Elementary *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: FRE 102 Beginning French II |
Introduction to the French language and development of speaking, listening, reading and writing skills through the use of basic texts.
When offered in Paris, as part of active language acquisition, and in order to help you engage in diverse, cultural experiences, the instructor will lead a limited number of discovery excursions into the city of Paris including, but not limited to libraries, museums, theatres, or local bakeries. |
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FREN 106-070: French II: Elementary/Intermediate *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: FRE 201 Intermediate French I |
Completion of basic French. Increasing mastery of the basic skills of speaking, listening, reading and writing.
When taught in Paris, as part of active language acquisition, and in order to help you engage in diverse, cultural experiences, the instructor will lead a limited number of discovery excursions into the city of Paris including, but not limited to libraries, museums, theatres, or local bakeries. |
Prerequisite: FREN 105 or 2-3 years of high school French |
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FREN 107-070: French III: Intermediate *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: FRE 202 Intermediate French II |
Review of grammar, continued practice in speaking and writing, and reading texts of average difficulty. When taught in Paris, as part of active language acquisition, and in order to help you engage in diverse, cultural experiences, the instructor will lead a limited number of discovery excursions into the city of Paris including, but not limited to libraries, museums, theatres, or local bakeries. |
Prerequisite: FREN 106 or 4 years of high school French |
Satisfies the following requirements: |
| Arts and Sciences - Foreign Language |
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FREN 167-070: Beginning French (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: FRE 101 Beginning French I |
Seminar. |
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FREN 250-071: Introduction to Business French (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: FRE 301 Advanced French |
Familiarizes students with characteristics of business French (terminology, syntactical patterns, etc.) and policies and practices of the French business community. |
Prerequisite: FREN 211 and one other 200-level FREN course taught in French. |
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HOSP 464-071: International Hospitality Internship *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: INT 423 International Internship: the Multicultural Workplace |
International internship experience working in a hospitality related internship with written reflections on the cultural and business practices of the host country.Internship in a business-related field. Includes preparation of a journal of activities and a final project. When offered abroad, this course is comprised of both a practical internship field component of 20 hours/week and a reflective and theoretical seminar component that together, are purposefully designed to challenge students to learn, to engage with, and develop fluency working within a multicultural context, while also strengthening the business competencies necessary to succeed in today’s workplace. Perhaps even more important, the course will cover areas vital to new graduates: job searching, how to present oneself and leveraging one's global and intercultural fluency. |
Restrictions: Enrollment contingent upon timely internship application and successful interview with sponsoring organization. |
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LLCU 208-075: Contemporary France I *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: CUL 350 CDG French Civilization and Culture |
An introduction to contemporary France, its culture, its people, their way of life and the issues confronting them. When taught in Paris, this course engages you in the life and culture of France’s capital city, Paris, in order to encounter, analyze and appreciate French society, culture and behavioral patterns. In this process, you will acquire knowledge of the main events, personalities and periods of the history of France and, importantly, of their ongoing influence over current French life and contemporary ideas. You will also survey the major institutions and power structures of French society and assess how they have changed over the last century. These you will investigate both in class and out in order to better identify and understand the principal ideological, political, social and cultural fault lines in France today.
ONLY OFFERED FALL |
Satisfies the following requirements: |
| Arts and Sciences - Group B |
Restrictions: taught in English; not for French major credit |
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MATH 243-070: Analytic Geometry and Calculus C *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (4 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: MATH 245 CDG Calculus III |
In this course you will cover material dealing with functions of multivariable calculus. These mathematics are an important tool in science and engineering and an extensions of the concepts from first and second-semester calculus. The content of this course will thus focus on: curves and surfaces in Euclidean 3-space, length and curvature, area and volume; surfaces, partial derivatives, total differential, tangent planes to surfaces; gradient; vector-valued functions; path integral; Stokes’ theorem, Green’s Theorem, and Divergence Theorem.In addition to these cognitive and knowledge skills, students in this course will consider the contributions of the French in science, mathematics, technology, and engineering as well as explore practical applications of math and science to the field of engineering.
ONLY OFFERED FALL |
Prerequisite: MATH 242 |
Restrictions: Includes use of computers to perform symbolic, numerical and graphical analysis. Students must download UD's Mathematica software prior to departure and bring their laptop with them to Paris. |
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MATH 302-070: Ordinary Differential Equations *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: MATH 350 CDG Differential Equations |
Solutions and applications of ordinary differential equations as well as systems. Considers initial value problems and boundary value problems. Topics include Laplace transform, the phase plane, series solutions and partial differential equations. Includes use of computers to solve differential equations. |
Prerequisite: MATH 243 - Analytic Geometry and Calculus C |
Restrictions: Credit is not given for both MATH302 and either MATH 342, MATH 351 or MATH352. |
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MEEG 241-070: Thermodynamics section 070 and 070D (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: ENGR 281 CDG Thermodynamics |
Basic concepts of thermodynamics including properties of substances and gas mixtures, energy, entropy, and exergy. First and second law analysis of systems and control volumes. Applications to steady-flow devices and systems to power production, propulsion, and air conditioning. In Paris, you will have the opportunity to discuss in physical and quantitative terms the functioning of systems that are apparently complex and diverse such as a heat pump, a combustion engine, or a solar panel. You will explore situations that bring the predictive power of physics into play in unexpected and important situations such as in the energetics of a living cell and discuss ideas such as harnessing energy from the surroundings that continuously challenge engineers and are at the heart of our present energetic and environmental concerns and strategies. |
Prerequisite: MATH 242 |
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PHIL 204: World Religions (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: REL 310 World Religions |
Varieties of religious belief and practice from diverse cultures, includingrepresentative Asian and Western traditions, studied mainly in terms of theirhistorical development and importance.When taught in Paris, the course also pays close attention to the multicultural and multiethnic realities of contemporary Europe and France, in particular, by offering platforms for interfaith dialogue and special visits to la Mosquée de Paris and la Grande Synagogue de Paris.
NO LONGER OFFERED |
Satisfies the following requirements: |
| University Arts/Humanities Breadth |
| Arts and Sciences - Group A |
| Multicultural |
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POSC 240-074: Introduction to Global Politics (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: IRS 331 Globalization: Politics, Culture & Governance |
Introduction to key concepts and theories for understanding politics on a global level. Topics include the structure of the international system, causes of war and peace, economic globalization, international organizations and other issues and processes that cross national borders. |
Satisfies the following requirements: |
| Arts and Sciences - Group C |
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POSC 309-070: Political Culture by Country: France *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: POL 362 Current Political Issues in France |
This course provides a survey and analysis of the major political, ideological, social, economic and cultural issues confronting France in the early 21st century. Students will first receive an overview of France’s quest for domestic political and social stability as well as international stature and cultural recognition abroad since the founding of the Fifth Republic in 1958.The course then turns to the many political issues determining the form and substance of political debate and decision-making in France today. These include the political fallout and ramifications of the 2012 presidential and legislative elections; France’s ongoing struggle to respond effectively to Greek debt and the related financial and identity crisis it is provoking in the EU; the many initiatives in France for reforming French political institutions; the current debates over what to do about unemployment, immigration, retirement, financial and fiscal regulation, cultural policies, health care, energy policy, education, housing, gender equality, discrimination; and finally what foreign policy role France can play both in sustaining European integration and in responding constructively to the Arab spring.
ONLY OFFERED FALL |
Prerequisite: One introductory course in Political Science |
Satisfies the following requirements: |
| Arts and Sciences - Group B |
| Global Studies Minor |
This course satisfies a requirement for the Political Science major, the International Relations major, and the Political Science minor. |
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POSC 445: Human Rights and World Politics *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: POLS 350 Human Rights: Universal Principles in World Politics |
Alternative theories of human rights examined in cross-cultural and international contexts. International documents, contemporary cases (e.g. France) and U.S. foreign policies also examined and evaluated. When taught in Paris, This course provides a survey and analysis of the problems and challenges of setting and upholding universal standards of respect for international human rights in contemporary world politics. This requires an initial review of the historical, religious, and intellectual background here in Europe that gave rise to the early legal theories and doctrines upon which modern international human rights law would come to be based. The course will also address the difficult task of defining universal principles of human rights, of determining the content of such rights, of considering the different cultural and theoretical approaches to these rights, and of creating effective methods of monitoring and enforcement of human rights standards.
NO LONGER OFFERED |
Prerequisite: Introductory courses in International Relations and 20th century European or world history are recommended. |
Satisfies the following requirements: |
| Global Studies Minor |
This course satisfies a requirement for the Political Science major, the International Relations major, and the Political Science minor. |
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POSC 464-070: Internship in Political Science and International Relations: Paris - English Program *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: INT 423 International Internship: the Multicultural Workplace |
Internship in a political science or international relations-related field. Includes preparation of a journal of activities and a final project. When offered abroad, this course is comprised of both a practical internship field component of 20 hours/week and a reflective and theoretical seminar component that together, are purposefully designed to challenge students to learn, to engage with, and develop fluency working within a multicultural context, while also strengthening the business competencies necessary to succeed in today’s workplace. Perhaps even more important, the course will cover areas vital to new graduates: job searching, how to present oneself and leveraging one's global and intercultural fluency. |
Prerequisite: Enrollment contingent upon timely internship application and successful interview with sponsoring organization. |
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UNIV 362-072: Experiential Learning *Under Review/Not Available for Enrollment* (3 credits) |
Provider Equivalent: INT 423 International Internship: the Multicultural Workplace |
When offered abroad, this course is comprised of both a practical internship field component of 20 hours/week and a reflective and theoretical seminar component that together, are purposefully designed to challenge stuents to learn, to engage with, and develop fluency working within a multicultural context, while also strengthening the business competencies necessary to succeed in today’s workplace. Perhaps even more important, the course will cover areas vital to new graduates: job searching, how to present oneself and leveraging one's global and intercultural fluency. |
Restrictions: Enrollment contingent upon timely internship application and successful interview with sponsoring organization. |
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UNIV 373-017: Study Abroad - Paris English (0 credits) pass/fail |
Students are asked to reflect upon changes in their knowledge, skills, and attitudes that occur due to their study abroad experience and are required to complete a brief post-program assessment of these changes. |
Satisfies the following requirements: |
| Discovery Learning |
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Requirements | |
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For all participants, a formal application is necessary, including at least one recommendation. An interview may be conducted in person or by Zoom.
A transcript is required from Non-UD applicants only. Non-UD students, please email a copy of your official transcript to the Program Coordinator.
Study abroad at the University of Delaware is highly competitive. Please review the study abroad acceptance process. If you are not selected for your first choice program, we encourage you to apply to another program. |
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Costs | |
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Other important things to note:
- CGPS reserves the right to cancel a program at any time due to under-enrollment, safety/health/security issues, staffing issues, or any other relevant reason.
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Deadlines | |
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All charges, once posted to your account, are considered non-refundable. Payments are submitted through My Finances in UDSIS. |
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Submit Program Application by 5pm on | TBD |
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*All students will receive an email when they are accepted to a program and will have 10 days from that notification to make their $0.00 Initial Payment. |
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Contacts | |
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Desirae Wright |
Study Abroad Coordinator |
121 E Delaware Avenue, Newark, DE, 19716 |
302-831-4810 |
wrightde@udel.edu |
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Program information is subject to change at any time. Please check this web site periodically for updates. |