As a student, Laura Scott selected Griffith College in Dublin,
Ireland, as her destination for studying abroad. Now she directs the
Study Abroad program there and will be glad to answer questions in the
NSHSS forums from members about studying abroad. Here she shares her
own experience in selecting Ireland as her destination for studying
abroad.
Studying Abroad in Ireland
Laura Scott, Field Director, North America
Griffith College Dublin
www.gcdinternational.ie
Standing on buzzing
mid-morning O’Connell Street, Dublin’s nucleus, I’m genuinely
surprised by how small size of the city’s center. The buildings
barely scrape the sky, and I can walk from almost anywhere to almost
anywhere else. And yet, I know Ireland’s capital is full, overgrown
with playwrights, poets, musicians, artists, economists and software
programmers who have made an impact on the world that is much larger
than what the streets here could seem to hold.

Deciding to come to
Ireland to study abroad was easy for me. I felt prepared to become,
even for a temporary time, part of an island that seemed familiar even
before I stepped onto it. Wading through the information on study
abroad providers and institutions themselves, however, was far more
challenging. Initial skimming in my study abroad office library raised
questions I didn’t know I needed to ask. Did I want to enroll directly
to the college I hoped to attend, or go with a company that organizes
study abroad? Did I have to use a program pre-approved by my own
college? Could I contact the institutions myself to find out more
about course offerings? How did I know my credits would transfer back?
Surely tuition would be more expensive than my home institution?
I decided to start
with an initial web search on my own college website. This yielded
worthwhile results, as I learned that our Study Abroad Office held
periodic meetings in relation to study abroad. I made an appointment
with a study abroad advisor and looked then at the study abroad page
on programs. I found out that my institution offered both pre-approved
programs, as well as the option of choosing an independent program. I
noted down programs I liked and quickly moved on to the second part of
my investigation, the general web search. Just typing ‘study abroad’
into a search engine revealed over 13 million results! I narrowed it
down a bit more. ‘Study abroad Ireland’ yielded four million results.
I added an academic area: ‘Study abroad Ireland Literature,’ and here
I set down to work. I skimmed a number of both sponsored and
non-sponsored results, viewed images, testimonials and program
outlines that all appealed to my best sense of adventure and academic
excellence. I made another list and moved on to the third part of my
investigation: keeping my appointment with the Study Abroad Office.
Having asked an hour’s worth of questions, I felt equipped to run this
new development of going abroad past my friends and my family.
In the end, I opted
to work directly with the college I chose in Dublin, meeting
periodically with my advisor to ensure all my credits would transfer.
I was able to use my financial aid for the semester and obtained an
extra study abroad grant. A year’s worth of forethought and planning
was a tiny bit of work expended to gain this initial moment in Dublin.
People are moving around, in opposite directions, rushing to work,
buying the paper off a street vendor, walking to a café, catching a
bus. This dance is pure energy on the street in front of me. It is a
city waltz, and I’m the only one standing still, watching it pulse.
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