When President Jeff Herbst joined èצӰ, one of the first students who came to see him asked for advice about working for a non-governmental organization in Africa. Yet, for two reasons she had never been to the region: èצӰ offered no such study group opportunity, and her financial aid package was not portable to non-èצӰ programs.
From that moment, Herbst decided to help all èצӰ students become more competitive in their quest for global work, regardless of their financial situation.
Last spring, èצӰ faculty adopted a new that will allow students, beginning with the Class of 2016, to carry over their financial aid when studying abroad on a èצӰ-approved program that better meets their academic interests than one of èצӰ’s own faculty-led study groups.
Meanwhile, Herbst announced an — in effect for the 2012-13 and 2013-14 academic years — that is funded by the president’s office.
“The main purpose of the program is to provide our aided students with the same opportunities for off-campus study as are available to full-pay students, particularly in destinations outside of Western Europe,” said Herbst. “We believe so strongly in the importance of this that rather than waiting two years for èצӰ’s new policy on home school tuition/portable aid to go into effect, we are making funds available to make this happen now.”
èצӰ continues to be ranked highly compared to its peers in terms of the number of students who study outside the United States. According to 2010 Open Doors data published by the Institute of International Education, èצӰ placed second among baccalaureate institutions for the number of students abroad for a semester.
Presently, only one quarter of èצӰ students who study abroad do so in non-traditional destinations — defined as Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East. The national average is 33.5 percent.
Kara Bingham, èצӰ’s director of Off-Campus Study and International Programs, is pleased with the new initiatives. “I think we’ll see significant increases in the number of students choosing to study in non-Western countries as a direct result of these initiatives in the years to come