Returning Students: Cultural Re-entry
"It's a funny thing coming home. Nothing changes. Everything looks the same, feels the same, even smells the same. You realize what's changed is you." -F. Scott Fitzgerald
Welcome home! Below are some helpful resources to assist you following your study abroad experience.
"Culture shock is the expected confrontation with the unfamiliar. Re-entry shock is the unexpected confrontation with the familiar." 鈥 R. Michael Paige (from Maximizing Study Abroad)
Having now returned from study abroad you might find yourself experiencing re-entry shock. Below are some helpful resources to ease the transition back to being home.
- is a facilitated dialogue session meant to prompt an intentional analysis and reflection of your study abroad experience. The link will bring you to a recording of the Rocktober workshop, where study abroad returnees discussed their experiences. Check it out for some inspiration!
- discusses strategies for re-entry and making the most of your study abroad experience.
- offers a wide range of useful resources for students returning from study abroad.
- State.gov offers an in-depth look at what is, how it affects people, and tips on how to deal with it.
- addresses how reverse culture shock affects relationships and how students returning from abroad tend to feel 鈥榬ootless鈥. The page also contains insight into how a person may feel coming home, both on good days and bad days.
- offers a list of six easy ways to stay connected to your international friends after returning home.
- This site offers in-depth training and lessons on adjusting to different cultures, both when leaving home and when returning. It has great lessons on preparing to return home, dealing with being back, examining what a student learned during their time abroad, and how to reintegrate back into life and school.
- This site details the specifics of reverse culture shock. Included on the page is a helpful graph that sets 鈥渟ense of satisfaction鈥 against 鈥渢ime鈥 and depicts how a person experiences culture shock and reverse culture shock in a 鈥榃鈥 shaped curve on the graph.
- offers a working definition of reverse culture shock, as well as the stages experienced during cultural reentry. Also offers relevant questions, checklists, and other recourses relating to the topic.
Below are some ways in which you can keep your study abroad experience alive on-campus, in the community, and at home.
Keeping Your Experience Alive
On-Campus
- Apply to be a study abroad intern in the Study Abroad Office and share your experience with prospective students.
- Share your experience with other students by assisting with the Study Abroad Fair, information sessions, or becoming a global ambassador for the Study Abroad Office.
- Attend the GOLD workshops on global engagement to earn the Amethyst Global Engagement Certificate.
- Join a club related to your experience abroad! Learn about all the student organizations here: /student-organizations/.
- Continue to study any language you may have been taking while abroad. Review the department of Languages and Literatures website for a complete listing of languages offered at Geneseo: www.geneseo.edu/languages_literatures.
- Participate in Geneseo's International Education Week.
- Write a blog post on your study abroad experience for the . Also, read up on articles on the blog about re-entry.
In the Community
- Volunteer or intern with an organization with an international focus such as working with migrant workers or refugees.
- Attend local cultural festivals.
- Eat out at international restaurants or try your hand at making some of the cuisine at home!
At Home
- Practice any language you may have learned by using , , or watching movies and tv shows in that language.
- Listen to music or watch films/tv shows from the country you studied in.
- Follow the local news in the country you studied in.
- Stay in touch with your host family, friends, faculty and staff you met while abroad.
- Document your study abroad experience. There are many ways to do this: journal, blog, scrapbook.
Going Abroad Again
The 黑料网 Study Abroad Office is providing the following links and resources for information purposes only, but is not directly affiliated with the organizations listed.
Post-graduate Study, Fellowships, & Scholarships Abroad
For more information on international fellowships and scholarships, visit the Fellowships and Scholarships page. Please contact Dr. Michael Mills, Director of National Scholarships & Fellowships (millsm@geneseo.edu), for further details.
- helps to narrow down opportunities for graduate school abroad by allowing the student to choose a country and degree, then showing which schools fit the student鈥檚 interests.
- offers a fellowship for current and recent graduates of the US. During the time abroad students examine prejudice and discrimination in Europe.
- The offers fellowships for U.S. graduating college seniors, graduate students, young professionals and artists to study and/or conduct research abroad.
- The provides professional training placement, accommodation, training allowance, and additional support to participants who undertake a full-time, 12-month practical training placement, while studying towards an MBA degree, an MA or Postgraduate Certificate in London.
- The provides funding to both undergraduate and graduate students looking to study less widely taught languages in the languages鈥 native countries.
- The is designed to interest the next generation of American leaders in the island of Ireland. The Scholarship funds a year of study at one of nine participating institutions of higher learning in Ireland and Northern Ireland.
- The helps assist American students pursue graduate studies in the United Kingdom.
- (CLS): The United States Department of State sponsors the CLS Program for overseas intensive summer language institutes in thirteen critical need foreign languages. CLS institutes provide fully-funded group-based intensive language instruction and structured cultural enrichment experiences for seven to ten weeks for U.S. citizen undergraduate and graduate students.
- The offers financial assistance to American students looking to study at the University of Oxford.
- The enables outstanding graduate students from outside the United Kingdom to study at the University of Cambridge.
Teach Abroad
- : ETA鈥檚 help teach English language while serving as cultural ambassadors for the U.S.
- is affiliated with the Korean Ministry of Education. Participants share their knowledge and language with Korean students and teachers within the Korean public school system.
- : Coordinated by the Spanish Ministry of Education, this program gives junior and senior college students as well as college graduates the opportunity to learn about Spanish language and culture while sharing your own language and culture. Assistants will support classroom teachers in the K-12 system and Foreign Language Schools throughout Spain. The program begins in October and ends in May and assistants will have a 12-16 hour weekly schedule.
- The offers you the opportunity to work in France for 7 months, teaching English to French students of all ages. Assistants teach 12 hours a week and can be placed in all regions of metropolitan France and the overseas departments of French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, and R茅union.
- The offers individuals a chance to work in schools, government offices, and on boards of education across Japan. These programs offer different programs based on the applicant鈥檚 skills and abilities.
Work Abroad
- helps job and internship seekers find opportunities both at home and abroad. Geneseo students have special membership access to the resources and job listings found on this website.
- offers opportunities for students to teach, au pair, and work in foreign countries.
- allows you to search for interesting jobs all over the world.
- offers teaching and working abroad opportunities as well as internships around the world.
Volunteer Abroad
- : A great program for those looking to do more extended volunteer work outside the US.
- : This program engages volunteers in vital service within poor communities. Volunteers are placed in over 250 different agencies within 37 cities in the US, and six countries
- : Volunteers serve in Georgetown, the capital of Guyana. A year commitment is required with the opportunity to renew for a second year.
- : This is a searchable database of non-profit and NGO's around the world. You can find an organization that resonates with you and then follow up with the organization.
Intern Abroad
- offers volunteer, intern, and work experiences abroad. Experiences range from interning in the UK to work/travel program opportunities in Ireland, Australia and New Zealand.
- offers advice and opportunities for studying, interning, volunteering, and teaching abroad, as well as intensive language courses and full degrees abroad. The site also discusses the benefits of working and living abroad.
Communicating Your Experience Abroad
- "": This article discusses how to highlight a study abroad experience on a resume and give examples for how that listing might look.
- "": A site that provides students with help focused on thinking through their experiences and advice on how to get employers to understand why study abroad is important for a potential employee. This site also provides resume samples.
- "": This page will help students unpack their experiences in a way that will help them highlight their experiences and gained skills to employers. It also provides helpful tools for talking about their time abroad.
- "": This article offers great advice for interacting with potential employers after returning home. It offers tools for unpacking your experience as well as how to convey and articulate experiences abroad in order to highlight your marketable and employable qualities.