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-   -   Study Abroad Aug-December (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/study-abroad-aug-december-976148/)

jgg Apr 28th, 2013 07:03 PM

My daughter is a college student currently studying abroad in Rome (Feb - May). She has traveled quite extensively with us prior to this where we usually stay 4-5 days in each location. However, she has been traveling quite a bit with her fellow classmates. They started out traveling to other places in Italy. But then started exploring more of Europe. She has done weekend trips to Budapest, Berlin, Copenhagen, Dublin, Brussels and Paris.

She has loved all these weekend trips!! While a few times, particularly Berlin she wished she had been there longer she always had a great time and has also really enjoyed seeing other parts of Europe and enjoying the food and culture there, even if for a short time.

They usually fly Ryanair and EasyJet which seem to have the cheapest fares. Just be sure you only bring a backpack or one bag that will fit in the overhead so you don't have to pay any luggage fees. You could consider the train to London and Paris but other than that I would fly.

They have stayed in a combination of hostels, apts and hotels. My daughter has done most of the accommodations for everyone and I've been impressed! She has almost always found something for $25-$50/person per night (except for in Paris). They have traveled in groups of 3-6. Easier to get a private room in a hostel if you have more people you are traveling with.

I would not discourage you from your plan. You are in Europe and I have encouraged my daughter to see as much of the continent as she can. I too assume you mean $350/person per trip. MIGHT be tough, as low as fares are they may not be THAT low. Her cheapest was Rome-Budapest which was $95USD but most are closer to $150-$200. Also keep in mind the cost of transport to the airport - not sure how close you are. I wouldn't plan too many daytrips outside of the city you are choosing because there probably won't be enough time. They generally fly out Thurs night (no classes on Fri). Spend Fri/Sat there and then fly home on Sunday morning.

It won't be that hard to find out what to do when you are there. Read through old trip reports here, there will be other students traveling to these places and if they go before you they can give you good info., or my daughter had friend's who were studying or had studied the previous semester in some of those places. They were particularly helpful for where the best places are for young adults to go in the evening.

Good luck!! My daughter has had an amazing experience- can't believe she's home in just under a month. She just keeps telling me all the places we will need to take her back too!!

Christina Apr 29th, 2013 06:58 AM

I think this would be a lot easier to do if the OP were in London, for example, or any place easier to get to an airport or train station. Because that college is near Leicester and Nottingham, it takes about an hour to just get to London from there by train. So it is just going to add on a lot more time and money to be traveling every weekend when you consider that location, that's all.

Good tip on the hand baggage for Easyjet, as the luggage fee is around 15-20 euro per one-way, as I recall, to check a bag. But if these are weekend trips, that actually makes it easier in that regard. But Easyjet from London to Rome is around 60 GBP (each way), which is close to US$100. That is a fairly typical Easyjet fare, I guess, for some longer routes. I have paid around 50 euro, I guess from some shorter ones I've done. So if you are paying $200 for the airfare RT, that leaves $150 for the weekend. Possible, but one has to be really careful with the accommodations, of course. Well, that may actually be difficult, because that is only $50 a day on a 3-day weekend, and for food and accommodation, and any transport or sightseeing tickets, etc., that is pretty difficult.

I'd also think maybe you don't have to do this every single weekend, sounds a bit exhausting, actually. So I might vary it by closer places. You can get to Edinburgh by train from there fairly easily, it takes a bit less than 4 hours, for example. I don't know about train fare, but obviously going to/from London by train all the time as a departure point (I presume) and then airports will add up in various ways (time and money).

isabel Apr 29th, 2013 07:47 AM

Not to sound too much like a parent here, but when were you planning to study, write papers, etc. You are getting college credit for the courses you are taking? Don't you expect to have to do some work? In most cases you have 4 days each week away from school. You might want to dial it back just a little.

My daughter did two study abroads in college and did do some traveling but less than she anticipated. And I agree with the others who say maybe do some less time consuming weekends to closer destinations that don't require flying.

If you mean $350 per person per weekend that should be doable. But maybe consider just staying in each city rather than trying to see other places (eg in France just stick to Paris, you could do a day trip to Versaille but I would think you'd rather spend the whole time in Paris itself).

How did you come up with which place each weekend? Have you already booked flights? On the one hand you need to book economy flights months ahead in order to get good prices, but that limits your flexibility. I would schedule flights every other weekend at most, and then if you want to go somewhere on the in between weekends go someplace within England that can be done by train.

PalenQ Apr 29th, 2013 08:02 AM

marking for later comment

skatedancer Apr 29th, 2013 08:34 AM

another factor in the budget airlines is that the cheapest flights often come very early in the morning so you have to factor in how you will get to and from the airport since public transportation might not be an option so early. That means taxis....

Plus, the time and cost of getting to and from your study abroad city to the airport.

I am also speaking from the experience of someone with a daughter currently studying abroad and traveling, and not in a major airport city.

PalenQ Apr 29th, 2013 11:14 AM

You may want to look into the various youth railpasses for folks under age 26 - there is one in Britain and the Global Eurail Youthpass valid in every other country and if you buy one of those you get 50% off a BritRailYouthpass, which is already cheap and lets you hop on any train in Britain anytime.

Anyway if going by train check out these IMO fantastic sites - www.seat61.com; www.budgeteuropetravel.com and www.ricksteves.com.

Passes are not valid on Chuunel trains to Paris or Brussels from London but there is a spcial low rate for youths again under 26 I believe. www.eurostar.com. Early bird doth get the proverbial worm with Cunnel train tickets.

PalenQ Apr 29th, 2013 12:53 PM

Get a copy of Let's Go Europe - it will save you money just by its unparalleled coverage of budget accommodations - zillions of places covered.

Scootoir May 1st, 2013 05:46 PM

Isabel--I've been wondering the same thing about studying. Perhaps study abroad is not as challenging as college as I remember it (a long time ago).

PalenQ May 2nd, 2013 10:47 AM

depends on the type of program - immersion programs are great to learn languages - means living with locals, etc.

But most college trips tend to appeal to touring more than immersion and you are with a large group of Americans.

Try to find one with local immersion or go for the fun of it and travel with a fun-loving group.

Christina May 2nd, 2013 11:07 AM

I think study abroad courses really vary a lot across colleges and their intent. The best ones are hard work and a student would be going to a particular are for some purpose, not just to have a vacation and travel. The purpose should be a language course, and some major or course that is related and special to the area so there is some reason for it (ie, Italian Renaissance architecture in Italy). Just going to some school in England at Harlaxton really doesn't have any educational purpose, I would imagine, it's just a trip for the kids.

Now maybe I am wrong and there is some well-regarded special program here for which you need to be in England, or at least, that would enhance the coursework. I'd be interested in what it is. A lot of these colleges do this because they make a lot of money off those foreign study abroad students. And the US colleges do it to appeal to students who get excited about a trip abroad. Harlaxton advertises an honors course in British studies, but if that were your major, I would presume you wouldn't be escaping Great Britain every weekend. It isn't really a British university, anyway, it's a US university (University of Evansville, IN) with an office and program over there. Maybe they bought some buildings, but I would think not.

So it is probably a fun experience, but I don't think the goal is really the academics.

isabel May 2nd, 2013 04:13 PM

Of course a lot of study abroad students are actually attending a foreign university. My daughter's exchange program was through the university she attended here in the US (so that the credit was transferable) but it was at the University of Paris; she attended classes with French students (and other international students), which were taught in French. She lived in the International Students Housing area where there were students from at least 50 countries. She had relatively little interaction with other Americans, and none that she knew before she went.


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