After six consecutive terms of a pandemic-related hiatus that began in March 2020, undergraduates are once again studying abroad through programs sponsored by the .
âOff-campus programs are a vital part of the Dartmouth experience for both students and faculty, and Iâm very happy that the programs have been back up and running this year,â says , associate dean for interdisciplinary programs, who credits the instituteâs executive director, , and his staff for their âamazing job of making sure these programs run safely, smoothly, and successfully.â
Since fall, foreign study and language study abroad programs (FSPs and LSAs) as well as domestic off-campus programs have been running in Buenos Aires, London, Los Angeles, and Rome, among other locations, organized by more than a dozen academic departments. In total, 28 faculty-led programs are planned for this academic year, serving 388 students. All programs have site-specific COVID plans that include protocols for testing, isolation, and other operational support.
âThis year was different because of COVID-19, and there has been a pent-up demand to be on campus, but students also want to have study abroad as part of their Dartmouth experience,â says Tansey. âGoing forward, we expect to run 32 programs a year, plus exchange programs with universities around the world.â
New âGreen Cityâ Program in Berlin
This spring the and have teamed up to offer âGreen City, Sustainable Engineering and Full-Immersion German in Berlinââa pilot program blending study in German language and culture with the opportunity to earn engineering credits. The first-of-its-kind program is co-led by Associate Professor of German and Professor of Engineering .
The program is one example of how Dartmouth faculty have been collaborating on new interdisciplinary programs to complement the curriculum and build on traditional FSP and LSA offerings.
âFaculty are continually innovating with off-campus programs to ensure they are relevant and responsive to the academic interests of Dartmouth students,â Delmont says.
The push for the combined program in German and engineering came from the students themselves, McGillen and Bonfert-Taylor say.
âEngineering students often canât go on foreign study programs because the major is packed with requirements, and to take a term without any engineering credits is really difficult,â says Bonfert-Taylor. âStudents kept coming to me to ask, âCanât you start a program that combines a foreign study experience with engineering?â And the same students came to Petra McGillen to say, âWeâre interested in German, but we need engineering credits, canât you organize something?â So we did some surveys and found that thereâs a great need and desire for a program like this.â
In Berlin, students live with host families and have the choice of three out of four courses: a fast-track German language course, a course in German history and culture, and, for engineering credit, âIntroduction to Environmental Engineeringâ and âSustainable Urban Systems.â
They also participate in field trips and other enrichment activities that help showcase the importance of language and cultural understanding to effective engineering solutions.

On a day-trip to Görlitzâa town in the former East Germany, in a region shaped by lignite coal miningâstudents toured the surviving pre-World War II architecture and visited a remediated mine site, where they spoke with a former miner who had lost his livelihood in the transition to cleaner energy.
âHearing our guide speak with so much nostalgia about his work was incredible,â program participant Stephen Veatch â24 says of the experience. âIt was so moving to see how people can feel left behind in the transition from one predominant energy source to alternatives.â
âIt was one of those moments when German culture and political history and sustainable engineering topics came together in this really eye-opening way,â McGillen says. âThe students immediately understood that in any energy transition you need to be aware of the profound social implications and find ways to mitigate them.â
Fall Term âWinterimâ Innovations
Other off-campus programs have been adapting both to the realities of the pandemic and to student needs, Tansey says. For example, language programs that in the past had been geared to a single level of instruction have been experimenting with offering multiple levels.

And taking advantage of Dartmouthâs extended winter break, or âwinterim,â the Guarini Institute is working to develop several new, shorter programs, often in conjunction with fall-term courses on campus.
For example, in the coming year, students in the Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages course ââ will spend winterim in Ho Chi Minh City on a program led by Associate Professor of History , for which they will receive an additional academic credit as part of their regular fall-term tuition.
The program is a partnership with Fulbright University Vietnam. During the fall the Dartmouth students will engage remotely with their peer counterparts in Vietnam. Once in-country, both groups of students will collaborate in-person on a joint field research project.
Likewise, Associate Professor of German Studies and Eli M. Black Distinguished Professor of Jewish Studies are offering a new Berlin-based winterim course on âdescribed on the program website as âan intensive immersion in the history of Jews in Berlinâs vibrant intellectual, cultural and political life from the late 18th century to the present.â
As with âDeveloping Vietnam,â participants will earn a fall-term academic credit.
Fall term winterim programs open study abroad opportunities to students whose academic or athletic commitments might make it difficult to participate in full-term off-campus programs, Tansey says. âIt adds flexibility for students.â