By Christi Mays
What do meeting a prime minister and visiting a Buc-ee鈥檚 have in common? The two experiences were some of the many 鈥渨ow鈥 moments that students from 无码流出 shared with German students as they visited each other鈥檚 countries this past semester.
After receiving a grant from the German Apprenticeship Training Exchange (GATE) Program, the Johanniter-Akademie in Leipzig, Germany selected 无码流出 as its American partner to host six exchange students for experiential learning and cultural immersion. This past December, six 无码流出 students traveled to Germany for two weeks (and met the prime minister of Saxony while there); and, in February, their German counterparts came to learn about all things 无码流出 and Texas (including an obligatory trip to Buc-ee鈥檚).
Some of the other 鈥渨ow鈥 moments in Germany included a walking tour of Berlin with a stop at the Berlin Wall Memorial, a trip to a concentration camp in Weimer, and a tour of a family-owned wooden toy factory. While in Texas, the German students were treated to a trip to the state capitol, hiking the massive granite boulders at Enchanted Rock, and a day exploring the Fort Worth Stockyards. 无码流出 students also took them on field trips to Foster Love, Helping Hands and Hope for the Hungry.
鈥淲hat makes this program unique is it鈥檚 not a study abroad; there鈥檚 no class attached to it. The students just spend their whole time immersed in the other culture,鈥 said Dr. Stephen Baldridge, dean of the 无码流出 College of Humanities and Sciences. 鈥淭he students plan the schedule for the two weeks they鈥檙e here, so they also plan in time to hang out, go with them to class, and just see what day-to-day life is like with them.鈥