Galloway, N.J. — Louis Santiago-Conde loves to travel, but he never thought he could afford to study
abroad.

But the first-year student’s world view has totally changed after attending the Education
Abroad Fair in the Multicultural Center on Jan. 30.

“I learned that financial aid can help, and that definitely made me more excited,”
said the esports management major who wants to go to England where gaming “is one
of the biggest things.”

“I was just walking by, but once they started talking to me, I got interested right
away,” said the Camden native. “It was a very positive and awesome experience.”

Patricia Sagasti Suppes, Stockton’s new Director of Global Engagement, not only wants
to expand offerings for Stockton students, but find opportunities for faculty as well,
including exchanges and opportunities for joint research.

The idea that studying abroad is too expensive is one of the myths that senior Nikki
Troehler would like to dispel. She’s works in the Office of Global Engagement and is traveling to Greece this summer to finish her Liberal Studies degree with minors in Global Studies and Historical Studies.

“I didn’t know that studying abroad was a thing coming from a first-generation background,”
said the Mays Landing native, who has traveled back and forth several times to Greece
with her Yaya, or grandmother. “Aside from my personal experiences, I didn’t think
this was accessible. I thought it was too expensive. I thought it would delay graduation.

“And all of those myths can be busted.”

Breaking down barriers for students to study abroad is one of the primary missions
of Patricia Sagasti Suppes, Stockton’s new Director of Global Engagement. She knows
studying abroad can bring huge benefits to students, including important skills such
as flexibility and adaptability.

“A student who studies abroad is more likely to graduate on time. Their GPAs tend
to go up after studying abroad. They are more likely to stay at their institution.
And they are more likely to have a broader array of job opportunities when they graduate
with a higher salary,” she said.

But for her, the biggest asset is that students can become more internationally engaged.

“It’s not just that you learn about other cultures, but that you learn to examine
your own culture and your own presumptions about the world,” she said. “The world
isn’t that big. We know that what happens here is going to affect what happens somewhere
else.”

Suppes said coming to Stockton offered her a unique opportunity to build something
at a university that’s attractive to students abroad because it’s by the beach and
near big cities like New York and Philadelphia. She not only wants to expand offerings
for students, but find opportunities for faculty as well, including exchanges and
opportunities for joint research.

She said her favorite study-abroad programs are when faculty teach all semester about
a country and then take students to that country.

“Study abroad can and should be deeper than what you’re capable of experiencing on
your own,” Suppes said. “You are doing work as part of it, and we all know that human
beings learn more when they make greater effort. So, if the students are putting more
into it, they are getting more out of it.”

kamiya riley

Sophomore Kamiya Riley just returned
from a study trip to Ghana led by
Professor Donnetrice Allison.

Sophomore Kamiya Riley just returned from a study trip to Ghana led by Professor Donnetrice
Allison. The trip was part of a West Africa class led by Allison, and it had such
an impact on Riley that she volunteered at the fair to encourage other students to
study abroad.

“It was so beautiful there. I didn’t want to leave,” Riley said. “I was really excited
to try the new and different foods and hearing their language and seeing the way they
lived because it’s so different from ours.”

She said she was worried about getting home sick if she studied abroad for an entire
semester, but after the Ghana trip she’s ready to see more of the world.

“I’m most interested in Thailand. It’s just always interested me,” she said. “It just
looks so nice and peaceful there. It’s definitely my top place that I want to go next.”

Being more courageous and willing to take some risks is one of the benefits Troehler
said she’s gotten by traveling, and she’s excited her final degree classes will be
in Greece.

“I think travel has given me tremendous patience, initiative and perspective,” she
said. “I wanted to understand more about other cultures and how the world worked.
I think having experiences abroad helps develop mutual understanding and empathy that’s
really needed to improve humanity in this global, interconnected world.”

— Story by Mark Melhorn, photos by Susan Allen

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