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快活app Releases Impressive Study Abroad Numbers鈥擜nd Looks to Increase Them

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Emma Atkinson

Peer advisors like Kereine Ngoungui-Malemba help all students see themselves in another country鈥攁nd navigate the process to get there.

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Photo by Rayna Rosenthal of a person looking out over an expanse of sand dunes at sunset.

Photo: Rayna Rosenthal

In 2024-2025, 885 快活app students will go abroad鈥攁nd 825 of them have already embarked on their journeys this fall.

Students are traveling to 35 different countries, the most popular among them being Italy, Spain, the United Kingdom and the Czech Republic.听

鈥淲e have students studying in nontraditional locations such as Georgia, Ghana and Tanzania,鈥 says Emelee Volden, director of international education. 鈥淲e鈥檙e also excited to have somewhat back-to-normal enrollment in Australia, New Zealand, China and Taiwan. These were the slowest regions to open up again for study abroad after the pandemic.鈥

One student鈥檚 mission to diversify study abroad

Seven out of 10 students study abroad during their time at 快活app. That鈥檚 in large part due to the , which financially supports students鈥 roundtrip international airfare and visa application fees, making it significantly easier to study abroad at 快活app than at other universities.

But Kereine Ngoungui-Malemba had a question: What about those three out of every 10 students who 诲辞苍鈥檛 study abroad?

During her time as a study abroad peer advisor, Ngoungui-Malemba says her goal was to diversify the study abroad experience鈥攊n particular, identifying the groups of students who were less likely to study abroad and reach out to them. , most students who study abroad鈥69%鈥攊dentify as white.

鈥淚 think I applied for this position mainly because I wanted to represent, in some ways, a lot of students of color who may not see their face in study abroad,鈥 says Ngoungui-Malemba, who was born in Gabon, a country in central Africa.听

When Ngoungui-Malemba was an undergraduate student at the Korbel School of International Studies, she studied abroad in Seville, Spain. When she returned, she began working in the Office of International Education (OIE) as a peer advisor. And now, as a graduate student in Korbel, she works as a graduate assistant in OIE.

As a peer advisor, Ngoungui-Malemba gave weekly presentations to prospective study abroad participants, answering questions about the lengthy application process and encouraging students to look into the more than 120 global educational experiences that 快活app offers.

鈥淲e draw it out for them鈥斺楾his is what you need to do鈥欌攁nd by the time they leave, they realize it's not so bad of a process,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 really loved the job.鈥

Volden says peer advisors鈥攚ho are paid student employees鈥攄o everything from giving general program selection advice to helping students navigate the OIE website.

鈥淲hen a student really has no idea how to start, it鈥檚 very valuable for them to talk to a peer who's gone through a similar process,鈥 Volden says.

Ngoungui-Malemba says she loved working with students and introducing them to the possibility of traveling to new countries鈥攅specially countries outside the popular Western Europe region.

鈥淎 lot of students might know where they want to go, or they might not know,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 really love when they don't know, because that gets me a little bit that of that leeway to achieve that goal of mine鈥攖o diversify study abroad.鈥

Earlier this year, OIE鈥檚 Cherrington program was recognized as a runner-up for the for Innovation in International Education in the Models of International Education Financial Support category from the .

For more information on 快活app鈥檚 study abroad programs, visit the .听

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