Close Menu
FarAwayJobs
    What's Hot
    Job Board

    A Guide for International Students

    Study Abroad

    Kneeskern takes the helm at Sandusky County Chamber

    Study Abroad

    UK University Announces Rs 10 Lakh Scholarships For Engineering Students

    Important Pages:
    • Free AI Resume
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Free AI Resume
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    FarAwayJobs
    Free AI Resume Builder
    • Remote Work

      Why Air Quality is Important

      The Generative Engine Optimization Blueprint: SEO in the Age of AI

      The Remote Work Top 10: Essentials Worth Buying

      Topical Authority Guide + Free Tool [2025]

      SEO Vs GEO: Key Differences To Make You Smarter

    • Remote Teams

      9 Remote 9 Interview Questions Every Interviewer Should Ask

      7 Ways to Build a Resilient Remote Team

      7 Reasons to Plan a Virtual Team Retreat

      7 Signs a Candidate Is a Good Fit for Your Team

      Top Recruiting Tips for Remote Companies

    • Management

      Report: 80% Say Salary Isn’t Keeping Up With Inflation

      Synchronous and Asynchronous Communication for Remote Teams| Remote.co

      Getting to Know Your Virtual Team: 10 Strategies

      10 Tips to Succeed as a Fully Remote Company

      How to Hire Contractors for Your Remote Team

    • Business

      Remote Work Predictions for 2018

      Remote Work: More Than a Perk for Pros with Chronic Conditions

      10 Tips for Running a Remote Business

      Starting a Company? Why You Should Go Remote

      How Remote Work Leads to More Loyal Employees

    • Offshoring

      7 ways an accounts payable BPO can benefit your company

      The complete guide to hiring a virtual phone assistant

      What is an IVR call center? (workflows, benefits, tools)

      The 2024 guide to omnichannel contact centers

      24 virtual assistant websites to find skilled VAs in 2024

    • Productivity

      How to measure what really matters

      The role of AI in performance management: Lead with trust

      Location-based productivity data you can trust

      the missing layer in productivity data

      4 productivity myths leaders should stop believing

    • Abroad

      Can You Intern Abroad in Latin America?

      Taylor’s Spring Semester in Athens

      These 6 College Students Did a Study Abroad Program in Spain

      Top Places to Study Abroad in Central and Eastern Europe

      Study Abroad vs. Exchange Program: What’s the Difference?

    • Job Search

      Job Hopping: Benefits And Disadvantages

      Remote Job Search Tips from Deb Haas

      Andrew Gobran (Doist) on Career Values and Remote Job Search Strategy

      24 Remote Jobs for Pregnant Women To Work-From-Home

      Make Your Remote Job Application Stand Out in 2025

    • Job Board
    FarAwayJobs
    Home » Study Abroad Changed How I see the World
    Study Abroad

    Study Abroad Changed How I see the World

    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
    Study Abroad Changed How I see the World
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp

     

    The person I am today is not the same person I was a year and a half ago.

    And I hate that I’m saying that, and fully believing in it. It’s just so cheesy! As I reflect
    on it, when I used to hear people say things about change, I was a bit of a nonbeliever.
    Change, to me, was like Santa Claus or the Tooth Fairy. It’s like when you’re talking
    to a child about what Santa Claus brought them for Christmas. You believe that they believe in Santa Claus, but as for you, you know the truth.

    Basically, I was a total change-cynic.

    I had never found myself in a position that left me much changed. Sure, I had graduated
    high school and began college, but even leaving home and beginning a new step in my
    academic career felt like it was the same old Jocelyn running on autopilot.

    And while the same old Jocelyn was an accomplished individual, who focused on doing
    well in school and creating relationships with those around her, and was a determined
    and driven athlete, she wasn’t really someone who took challenges easily. She barely
    bothered to leave her comfort zone, and thought most things that she wanted, were
    just out of her reach.

    When it came to change, I knew that doing so could be good for me, but knowing is
    so much easier than doing.

    Like many, I saw university as an opportunity to learn and grow both academically
    and as an individual. University was an opportunity for change. So, when I entered
    my first year of school in 2019, I attempted to search out opportunities that lead
    me to growth, and to change, and yet, I kept myself completely safe. Safe from being
    hurt, safe from challenging myself too much, safe from experiencing what could be
    really great for me.

    Growing up, I was constantly surrounded by stories about the travels my family had
    experienced at one time or the other.

     

    A young, self prescribed change-cynic.

     

     

    My mom is from Canada, and when she went to university, she had the opportunity to
    upgrade her nursing degree in Australia, as the Canadian nursing system was recognized
    there.

    She is my hero, and someone I respect and attempt to emanate every day of my life.
    My mom has always been someone I admire and the stories I’ve heard about her time
    abroad has only continued to paint her in an amazing light. She’s my hero, she was
    and is everything I hope to be as I grow into myself. She takes chances, she challenges
    herself, she’s honest with herself and those around her. And in her twenties, she
    was a daredevil. It’s inspiring.

     

    Heidi in Australia

    Jocelyn’s mother, Heidi when she was studying in Australia.

     

     

    After my mom graduated, she spent the summer backpacking. Backpacking around Australia,
    New Zealand, Fiji, and the surrounding islands. During a stop in the Cook Islands,
    while in the hotel pool with her brother, she met my dad. Just a twenty-something
    guy from Greeley, Colorado with his mom and stepdad on a scuba diving trip.

    They were so much cooler then.

    And, as the cliché line goes, the rest was history.

    Throughout each story my family told, one message was clear – they all hoped that,
    at some point, I would have the same opportunities for myself that they had had.

     

    Jocelyn's paretns first meet on thier trip

    Jocelyn’s mother and father with her uncle when her parents first met in the Cook
    Islands.

     

     

    When I was 14, my grandparents took me on a month long excursion to England, Scotland,
    Wales, and France. We went to more museums than we knew what to do with, we saw sights
    that I had learned about since I was young, and I was introduced to a world different
    to the one I was accustomed to. I was amazed by the sights, blown away by the fact
    that an entire world existed outside of my everyday life. Blown away about how much
    more the world had to offer then I had thought.

    During that month, my passion for traveling was born. Not only was I able to immerse
    myself into the rich history of the area around me, but I was also privileged to experience
    a culture outside of the one I had spent the previous 14 years of my life growing
    in. I now had this amazing chance to see the world up close and personal, with fresh
    eyes. What I saw was much more diverse, full of individuals who experienced similar
    situations to I, while carrying themselves through life with a different approach
    than I was used to. We may have spoken the same language, but we had a much different
    view of the world around us. While abroad, I came to recognize the importance of leaving
    an environment I found comfort in, opening my worldview, and learning more about the
    culture around me.

    Upon leaving the United Kingdom and Europe, and over the seven or so years from my
    trip abroad, and the five years before I began school, my dream of traveling continued
    to manifest, where I became increasingly more serious about studying abroad while
    in college.

     

    During the year prior to me beginning university, I had decided to swim for Wyoming,
    which I had originally chosen for a multitude of reasons, but mainly because of Wyoming’s
    amazing study abroad options and funding; considering the partnership between the
    institution and former United States Vice President, Dick Cheney and his wife, Lynne.
    The Cheney grants at the University of Wyoming allows our institution to currently
    host the largest study abroad scholarship endowment of any public land-grant university
    in America.

    After a series of events, including a worldwide pandemic, I was completing my third
    year of studies, having been injured and leaving the swim team, when a friend of mine
    reached out; saying that their professor had announced to their class that they had
    students pull out of study abroad program traveling to Rome, Italy and that the study
    abroad office would be reopening applications in attempt to gain a few more students
    to go.

    And suddenly everything was moving very quickly. I’ve always been someone that becomes
    easily overwhelmed with things that are either daunting or I’m unsure how to move
    forward, and with the deadline of the Rome trip, I was making meetings in the study
    abroad office and attempting to make decisions quickly.

    During my meetings at the study abroad office, I had also been introduced to the exact
    same program that would travel to London in the spring semester, as opposed to Rome
    in the fall. Like I said earlier, I had been to London a few years prior and had left
    feeling very certain that I could live in London when I got older.

    I distinctly remember a phone call with my mom, where I said the same exact thing.
    That I had always wanted to be in London for a longer time then I had been able to
    previously, but… Rome. And, because my mom had always been incredibly supportive,
    she replied, “I think that my dream for you is to do both. We’ll just figure it out.”

    And we did, we just figured it out. And to this day, I still believe that the loan
    payments are completely worth the experiences and growth I had.

     

    In the fall of 2022, I traveled to Rome and studied art history in a faculty-lead
    program with UW professor, Rachel Sailor. There I lived in an apartment with five
    other students who I became very close to over the three months.

     

    Rome Roomate

    Jocelyn and her London roommate, fellow UW student, Kari Holte in Scotland.

     

     

    While I was there, I became someone I’m incredibly proud of. As an only child, I’ve
    never much enjoyed being alone or doing errands by myself. I’m not one to search out
    adventures, I’m not someone you could call ‘easy-going,’ and yet I found myself going
    with the flow (albeit I went with the flow a little stressed), I said yes to every outing, every sightseeing opportunity, every learning
    opportunity, and I found myself seeking opportunities to go to museums or important
    Rome locations on my own.

    In short, my time in Rome made me a confident individual, someone who was confident
    in her independence and confident that I just can.

     

    Jocelyn in italy

    Visiting the Gardens and Villa d’Este in Tivoli, Italy (A.K.A where they filmed the
    Lizzie McGuire Movie).

     

     

    I came home for a little over a month in December of 2022, rushed to get a Visa and
    left in January of 2023 for three months in London.

    I’m often asked which my favorite of the two experiences is, and they were just so
    completely different that it is impossible to tell.

    On one hand, I met amazing individuals in Rome and truly got to know myself while
    I was there, but on the other, I was living out my 14 year old dream of truly living
    in jolly-‘ol London Town.

    I also like to explain it as this: I took what I learned and grew comfortable in in
    Rome and applied it to my approach of spending time in London. I grew personally in
    Rome, but in London I grew professionally.

     

    Neither of these trips abroad did not necessarily fit int my degree evaluation, as
    I am a communication major and PR minor, and one trip was art history and the other
    was political science. So, I wanted to find ways that I could move forward in my education
    while I was there. In Rome, I studied elementary Italian and international marketing,
    and in London I applied for a work placement.

    The work placement allowed for me to apply my established education in an internship
    setting, as I was placed with Ronald McDonald House UK, where I was the assistant
    to the Community Fundraiser. This kind of connection and opportunity, I don’t think,
    would have been possible without having gone through the entire experience as a whole.

    My time in London taught me how to be an accomplished professional; how to grow and
    learn in an already established environment, how to be helpful across a multitude
    of avenues, and how to speak up for additional opportunities. This was my first true
    internship that I had ever had, and the opportunities that I received during that
    time made me less concerned about future internships and what I could expect in a
    career.

     

    London Adventures with new friends

    Jocelyn and her roommates and friends made while visiting the Basilica of Saint Francis
    in Assisi.

     

     

    An unexpected experience London gave me was the change in my professional interests.

    When I was in high school, I used to struggle envisioning what I saw for myself in
    the future. That Jocelyn had also never seen herself in a specific career field, didn’t
    exactly have any interests or passions that could be turned into a job and just generally
    worried that it was going to take some time to figure out where she was headed. Coming
    into university, I took some time exploring different possible interests and ultimately
    landed on communication, because it interested me, and I seemed to excel at it.

    Let this be a footnote that that can be all that college is, finding what you do well
    in and sticking with it to see if it is an interest.

    I turned my interest for social media into the academic path I took at University
    of Wyoming, taking various journalism courses and even including some graphic design
    courses that I hoped would translate well in managing and developing content for someone’s
    social media account in the future.

    Going into my time abroad in London, I had curated my work placement to hopefully
    be in an area that could translate to my interest in social media and public relations,
    but I was also taking classes with our UW professor, Dr. Andrew Garner, that was centered
    around political science.

    During the course of the three months in London, we studied and analyzed the differences
    of democracies around the world and even discussed the operations that go into democratizing
    regions and how regime changes can play out. As a student who had never taken any
    kind of political science course, it was eye-opening.

    Just like when I was 14, traveling abroad for the first time. Just like when I was
    21, living in a country that did not speak the same language as I, I was experiencing
    something that completely altered my worldview.

     

    Jocelyn in London

    Jocelyn visiting the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew, outside of London.

     

     

    I have always been (overly) passionate about politics (apologizing now to my parents,
    my roommates, everyone) but had never really seen it as a possible career choice,
    but suddenly it was all I could see, all I could want for myself. I was suddenly reaching
    out to a connection I had made at the United Nations while I was in Rome, suddenly
    asking Dr. Garner how I could utilize my background in journalism in politics, suddenly
    thinking about graduate school going in a different direction than I had thought a
    year prior.

    Now, a year after arriving back in the States since leaving the UK, I am continuing
    to try and figure out how to involve political science, diplomacy and humanitarian
    aid, into my future career.

     

    I started this piece by saying that I didn’t believe in change, but studying abroad
    has been the best change to ever happen to me. I desperately needed this change. It woke me up, it awoke a passion in me for something I didn’t see a
    future in, it revealed a confidence in me that I never knew I had.

    Traveling has become so ingrained in who I am and where I find joy and I cannot wait
    to continue to foster this passion.

    So, if you clicked on this blog because you’ve been thinking about studying abroad,
    this is your sign.

    DO IT.

    Worry about the how later; there are so many scholarships and grants available to
    you, there are a multitude of programs that will absolutely fit into your degree path.
    The opportunities are endless.

    I want this for you! And I believe you can do it!

    Maybe studying abroad can change how you approach the world, or your future, or how
    you accept change too.

     


    Ready to change your view of the world too? 

    Explore your own study abroad experience with the University of Wyoming.

     

     

    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    Study Abroad

    Can You Intern Abroad in Latin America?

    Study Abroad

    Taylor’s Spring Semester in Athens

    Study Abroad

    These 6 College Students Did a Study Abroad Program in Spain

    Study Abroad

    Top Places to Study Abroad in Central and Eastern Europe

    Study Abroad

    Study Abroad vs. Exchange Program: What’s the Difference?

    Study Abroad

    When is the Best Time to Do a Study Abroad Program?

    Study Abroad

    These College Students Studied Abroad in the Czech Republic

    Study Abroad

    Top Places to Study Abroad Outside of Europe

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    Study Abroad

    Countries with most difficult education system – Investing Abroad News

    A growing number of students seeking to improve their employment prospects are choosing to pursue…

    Work While You Study Abroad in These 5 Countries

    Luka’s Study + Internship Abroad in Sydney

    DHS Strengthens Protections for Immigrant Workers

    Top Insights
    Study Abroad

    Peyton’s Semester Abroad in Salamanca

    Study Abroad

    The Columns » Six W&L Students Awarded Gilman Scholarships to Study Abroad » Washington and Lee University

    Productivity

    the missing layer in productivity data

    Job Board

    Five State Immigration Bills You Should Know About

    Study Abroad

    “Advocacy win” as US exchange programs funding slash avoided

    Most Popular
    Study Abroad

    Leaving On a Jet Plane: Studying Abroad Through Pace

    Remote Work

    Deutsche Bank leads return to office, ending work-from-home weekend

    Study Abroad

    China’s spy agency warns students studying, visiting and holidaying abroad against foreign espionage

    Categories
    • Business (61)
    • Job Board (303)
    • Job Search (62)
    • Management (55)
    • Offshoring (57)
    • Productivity (133)
    • Remote Teams (59)
    • Remote Work (280)
    • Study Abroad (1,998)
    Our Picks

    Studying abroad brought him closer to his parents’ migration story

    Study Abroad

    9 Books That ACTUALLY Impacted Me as a Remote Company Leader

    Remote Work

    AIFS Abroad Named 2022 GoAbroad Innovation Awards Finalist

    Study Abroad
    FarAwayJobs
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Job Board
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    © 2025 FarAwayJobs.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.