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Study Abroad Fair is the first step for students to learn about experiential learning

October 18, 2023

Study Abroad Fair is the first step for students to learn about experiential learning

For Ellen Shupe, professor of psychology, seeing how students are changed and impacted by study abroad trips keeps her coming back as a faculty leader for the Northern Ireland study abroad program.

After going on dozens of trips in Northern Ireland, and also Nicaragua, Shupe said she still finds every journey to be “so enriching, so valuable, and very, very rewarding.”

Northern Ireland is one of many study abroad programs offered at Grand Valley. The School of Engineering has more than 50 West Michigan industry partners that have foreign operations. We also provide students with the opportunities to complete their third co-op experience during the fall term in Germany through DHBW who offers more than 25 industry partners in a variety of industries. Electrical and Computer Engineering students can also complete one semester of full-time study abroad in Switzerland while students from all around the United States and Italy can enroll at JCU in Rome, Italy during the summer semesters. Students can learn more about these programs by visiting the Engineering Study and Work Abroad Programs page

Working in Northern Ireland, Shupe and her students learn about the psychology of conflict, studying the late 20th-century conflict known as the Troubles. During this trip, Shupe said she and students will meet with people who work with trauma victims and talk to leaders who are a part of the reconciliation process. 

Many schools in Ireland are segregated by the conflict, either Catholic or Protestant. Shupe’s group will work with one of the few integrated schools in the region. Shupe said the group will visit these institutions and see how reconciliation can unfold at the grassroots level. 

While Shupe is a huge advocate for independent travel, she said there is something inherently different about traveling as an educational group. 

“The discussion and the self-reflection that is built into the course make it qualitatively different,” said Shupe. “It is kind of magical when everything comes together. It sparks their interest in travel, and in learning about people with different experiences and backgrounds."

By: Thomas Garrett

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Page last modified October 18, 2023