How Studying Abroad is like a Reality TV Show
Want to Be the Star of Your Own Reality TV Show Without Being on TV? Study Abroad
Does any of this sound familiar?
Yeah, it's the fundamental formula used for most reality TV shows.
It is also the basic structure for something else most of you are probably less acquainted with: studying abroad.
Not all study abroad programs operate like reality TV shows, but they all have the potential to. Just imagine: a group of students, most if not all of whom did not know each other before the trip, are off to a country where they probably don't speak the language, and they're all the friends they have on that side of the world.
If you've never studied abroad before, you'll have no idea how time passes differently when you're in a foreign country with people you hoped and hoped you would become fast friends with. Time passes much more slowly. Everyday is a new experience. Everything as mundane as going to school and ordering lunch are novelities to you. Everybody is also new to you. You find out little things about each other everyday, figuring out along the way whether you're going to enjoy these people's company in the long run. Sometimes, you end up making your decisions pretty early.
Smaller study abroad programs (ten or less people) usually function more like reality TV shows. Any more than that, and it's just high school all over again with all the cliques, in-groups, and out-groups.
That's not to say subgroups can't form with a base group of ten or less, but the point is that everyone knows everyone. When I studied in Sweden, because there were nearly a hundred of us, I can clearly remember that there were certain people I never had a conversation with. I had my regular circle of buddies, and that was enough for me. Humans are intrinsically lazy like that.
When I studied in Japan, however, there were only ten of us Americans with ten Japanese who were paired with us as "tutors." Everybody knew everybody and talked with everybody. Naturally, I grew closer to some Americans and some Japanese than to others, but I talked with everyone.
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Takeaways
- You experience time and space compression when you study abroad.
- It is all very silly, and probably none of it will matter later on, but it matters at the moment.
- Reality TV is not reality. Studying abroad is reality.
Did You Know?
The guy who was actually out of the loop during my time in Japan apparently had no conscious idea regarding reality TV shows.
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Audrey M. Brown
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