Studying in Lima, Peru has made me much more competitive as a future business leader Past Review
By Steve11 (Pepperdine University) for
Pontifical Catholic University of Peru / PUCP: Lima - Direct Enrollment & Exchange
I learned a lot about developing economies, and future opportunities in Peru.
Personal Information
How much international exposure did you have prior to this program? | 0-2 weeks |
Review Your Program
* Overall educational experience
Academic rigor, intensity, resources, etc. |
The workload was marginally less than what I am used to. Professors were tremendously qualified, interesting, and accomodating. Grading was fair and clear. However, halfway through the semester, the internet access in the classrooms was revoked. Apparently, too many students were preoccupied with facebook or whatever. Either way, this was a surprising and insulting change that hindered my abilities to participate in class, as I would often look up topics of Peruvian relevance that I would otherwise have no way of knowing anything about. We are not children, and if students can get away with paying no attention in class, the exams aren't hard enough. |
* Host Country Program Administration
On-site administration of your program |
The administration was great. Very helpful, competent, and organized. They could do a little better job of explaining the extraordinarily confusing class scheduling regime, and issue reading material about navigating departments. But other than that, I loved them! |
* Housing:
How satisfied were you with your living arrangements? |
The school provided me with a great selection of host families to contact, and I found a perfect one that could not have possibly been better. |
* Food: |
The food was very good, but often risky to eat. Peruvians have the stomach of New York City pigeons. The stuff that they eat made me violently sick many times, including salmonella poisoning. I've always hated it, but now I really never want to see Mayonaise again. |
* Social & Cultural Integration:
How integrated did you feel with the local culture? |
I did everything from hiking Machu Pichu, to drinking with random old men at the Plaza de Acho before the bull fights, to speaking with protesters at the bull fights. None of this was arranged by my school, but there is so much in the city of Lima that is easily accessed by tourists. I had a host family, so this sort of thing was especially easy. |
* Health Care:
How well were health issues addressed during the program? |
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* Safety: |
Peruvians are rather paranoid. Perhaps with good reason, I don't know. I was not around for the decades of violence, terrorism, and crushing poverty they endured. But now, Peru seems very safe, stable, and increasingly prosperous. One can never be totally careless, but I never felt that my safety was even remotely threatened. Even when wandering through the ghetto in Lima, by myself at night, I did not feel endangered. This may have been a foolish assumption, but I did not see any evidence to validate the fears that Peruvians still hold on to. |
If you could do it all over again would you choose the same program? |
Yes
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Finances
* Money: How easily were you able to live on a student's budget?
(1 = not very easy/$200+ on food & personal expenses/week, 2.5 = $100/week, 5 = very easily/minimal cost) |
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Language
* Did your program have a foreign language component? | Yes |
If applicable, to what degree did your living situation aid your language acquisition? |
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Language acquisition improvement? |
Almost no one spoke English anywhere I went. All of my professors spoke English, but I never heard it. |
Direct Enrollment/Exchange
* Did you study abroad through an exchange program or did you directly enroll in the foreign university? | Exchange |
Other Program Information
* Where did you live?
Select all that apply |
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* Who did you live with?
Select all that apply |
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A Look Back
* What did you like most about the program? |
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* What could be improved? |
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* What do you know now that you wish you knew before going on this program? | Spanish speakers only, I am not a native speaker and it was a significant challenge. |