Odds Without Ends
Overpriced while overseas
Gregory Leporati, Editor in Chief
Issue date: 3/12/08Section: Editor Columns
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The increased study abroad programs are all a part of the University's attempt at getting even more students to study overseas, which is a growing trend at many colleges across the country.
Last year, the Institute of International Education found that over 200,000 American students study at foreign universities each year - more than double the amount that went abroad a decade ago.
With more universities, such as St. John's, offering even more opportunities to go overseas, that number may grow even higher in the next few years.
But more than a few students I know have asked themselves one important question: can I afford the economic burden of studying abroad?
Last summer, the New York Times published an article regarding the cost of studying abroad, noting that various American universities overcharge their students.
More specifically, it reports that studying abroad independently could be significantly less expensive than traveling overseas through an American college.
The Times article highlights Brendan Jones, a former student at Columbia University. Jones studied abroad independently at Oxford University several years ago, but not through a Columbia-run program.
Despite studying at Magdalen - a college in Oxford ranked higher than the one where Columbia sent students - Jones was unable to transfer those credits over when he came back to America. Columbia, according to the Times article, said it only allowed students to gain credit from programs it had approved.
It does make sense for American universities to only allow its own study abroad programs to count for college credit; after all, colleges want to make sure that the classes students take while studying abroad meet certain standards to make them worthy of credits.
However, in a case like Jones', where he studied at one of the most prestigious colleges in England, I find Columbia's decision rather ridiculous.
The Times noted that there are many critics of American universities' study-abroad programs, such as Barmak Nassirian, associate executive director at the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers. "What is objectionable," Nassirian told the Times, "is, if the student decides at his or her own risk to go overseas, the outright refusal to take credit from a legitimate foreign institution."
2008 Woodie Awards


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