A Tale of Two Cities: Pomona Students Find Study Away Adventure in Paris and Edinburgh

Full rainbow over city of Paris

Angel Yuan 鈥25 began studying French in her first-grade classroom in Vancouver, Canada. But she鈥檇 never set foot on French soil鈥攐r anywhere in Europe鈥攗ntil August, when she arrived in Paris for a semester-long study away experience. 鈥淔or me, Paris had aways been a faraway dream,鈥 she says. Now she wakes up every day in the City of Light.

Across the English Channel, 542 miles away as the crow鈥攐r easyJet鈥攆lies, computer science major Stephen Kwak 鈥25 is adapting to the Scottish educational system at the University of Edinburgh. 鈥淪tudying abroad, especially in the UK, provides me the opportunity to immerse myself in a new country and gain a global perspective,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 am originally from Korea and have always been interested in experiencing different cultures and broadening my horizons.鈥

Renewed interest in off-campus study

The two Pomona juniors are among 96 Sagehens studying away from campus this fall semester through the College鈥檚 International and Domestic Programs Office (IDPO). Spread from Argentina to Tanzania, the programs include fields of study ranging from Comparative Ecology and Conservation to Geopolitics, International Relations, and the Future of the Middle East. After a yearlong hiatus during the pandemic and low enrollment in the two most recent academic years, Nicole Desjardins Gowdy, senior director of international and domestic programs, notes a resurgence of interest in off-campus study.

Like Yuan, Sophia James 鈥25 is spending fall semester in Paris. An environmental analysis major at Pomona, she is using her Paris experience to work on her French and art minors, benefiting from the wealth of museums in the city. She shares a residential complex with more than 200 local students, and if she cranes her neck, she can see the Eiffel tower from her window. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a women鈥檚 retirement living place across the courtyard from us with these creative Parisian grandmas,鈥 says James. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l have intergenerational activities where you can make jewelry, do a yoga session or cook. I find them sweet鈥攖hey鈥檙e so friendly.鈥

At Pomona, James played varsity basketball, and in Paris, she鈥檚 joined a school team to continue competing. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not something I expected to do here, but surprisingly, it鈥檚 been the most rewarding experience for making friends and for French immersion,鈥 James says. 鈥淪omething about sports transcends the language barriers, and I鈥檝e been able to make some of my best friends in Paris.鈥

Experiencing a different style of learning

Stephanie Northrop 鈥24, like Kwak, is spending the semester in the . Northrop is a psychological science major and will graduate in May. 鈥淗aving only arrived on the Pomona campus as a sophomore due to COVID-19, I simply was not ready to study abroad last year,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檓 really ecstatic that it worked for me to study abroad in the fall semester of my senior year.鈥

Northrop has relatives in the United Kingdom and 鈥渨as curious to experience an educational style that is so different from Pomona.鈥 Classes are larger, and students have more responsibility for their own education, she says. Since there is no language barrier, Northrop hoped she would be able to make friends and become involved in university life more easily.

鈥淭he most surprising thing for me is how many opportunities I鈥檝e gotten at the university,鈥 Northrop remarks. At Pomona, she was part of the College鈥檚 Glee Club. 鈥淚 knew I wanted to keep singing,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 auditioned for and got into the Edinburgh University Chamber Choir,鈥 and it has opened doors to the choral world in Scotland. 鈥淚 have already been delighted to perform with the Scottish Concert Orchestra and look forward to singing in the Royal Norwegian Advent Concert later this year.鈥

Getting involved in local life

Yuan, too, has found opportunities to get involved in local life during her Paris semester. She recently joined a volunteer tutoring organization, helping primary school students with their homework. 鈥淎t first I was worried because I鈥檓 not a native French speaker,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut I found that they liked it when I helped them with English.鈥

Yuan鈥檚 full-time academic focus is coursework at SciencesPo, which, she notes, is one of the most highly ranked university programs in the world for the study of politics and of international relations, her major. 鈥淭he presidents of France have studied here,鈥 she says, adding that 鈥渁ll my classes are in French鈥攈igh-level, academic French.鈥 Sometimes, she says, she believed that she understood everything, and then 鈥渢here were moments when I was completely lost.鈥

Both Yuan and James found that when they first arrived, they experienced loneliness. 鈥淚 found that because I wasn鈥檛 living in a residential campus like Pomona, it was harder to make deep connections,鈥 says Yuan. Both students now, though, say they have made strong friendships during the semester.

Building confidence and making connections

For Kwak in Edinburgh, 鈥渁djusting to life in a foreign city built my confidence and adaptability in making friends and connections.鈥 He credits his study-away experience with providing 鈥渆ye-opening lessons about cultural differences, problem-solving and thriving outside my comfort zone鈥濃攍essons he hopes to draw on in his future career which he now foresees might include working abroad.

Northrop shares that perspective. She says she is considering applying to the University of Edinburgh鈥檚 Design Informatics master鈥檚 program to build on the interest kindled in her Big Data in Psychological Science class.

Northrop says she鈥檚 been thinking a lot 鈥渁bout how being somewhere always means there is someplace else that you can鈥檛 be.鈥 For all of the students, that place is the Pomona campus, for which they have a heightened appreciation.

But study away has magical moments, such as the day James climbed the Eiffel Tower. 鈥淚t was pouring rain, and since I鈥檇 already bought my ticket, I put on my raincoat and hoped for the best,鈥 she relates. To save money, James had bought a student ticket that required climbing up 20 flights of stairs. The wind was so strong that she noticed some people were struggling to stand up. 鈥淏ut then I got to the second level,鈥 she recalls, 鈥渁nd I looked out over the edge. There was this massive rainbow that spanned across the entire city. It was quite possibly the most beautiful view I鈥檇 ever seen.鈥

鈥淭he magic of Paris,鈥 James says, savoring the memory. 鈥淭he magic of Paris.鈥