Junior Year in France

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Junior Year in France Semester and Academic-Year Programs in Paris and Nice 2012-2013


{ Contents } THE PROGRAM

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distinctions 3 ACADEMIC PROGRAM TRAVEL AND LIVING

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ADMISSION 10-15 The Application Process Financial Aid Medical Insurance Financial Arrangements Colleges and Universities Represented 17 Students enrolled inside back cover { A d m i n i s t r at i v e P e r s o nn e l } At S w e e t B r i a r C o l l e g e Margaret A. Scouten, Ph.D., SUNY at Albany Director Sue S. Fauber Assistant to the Director Patricia B. Wydner Office Manager Giulia Witcombe Study Abroad Coordinator

in france Marie Grée Ph.D., New York University Resident Director, Paris Karen R. Parnet B.A. Associate Director, Paris Lucy Hervier B.A. Academic Consultant, Paris Frédérique Dorlane-Lassouani Office Manager, Paris Jacqueline Letzter Ph.D., Harvard University Resident Director, Nice Address all correspondence to: Junior Year in France P.O. Box 1075 Sweet Briar College Sweet Briar, Virginia 24595 jyf@sbc.edu (434) 381-6109 (434) 381-6283 fax sbc.edu/jyf


Program Mission Our mission is to enable you to develop a deeper understanding of the world and a broader perspective on your own country. We aim to provide an academic experience that increases your competency in the French language, while allowing you to elect courses that fit your academic goals. If you qualify for a course and the opportunity exists, we work with you to make it happen. That has been our focus since 1948.


Since 1948, we have sent students to Paris for an intensive immersion experience. In 2010 we opened a program in Nice.


the Program A b o v e t h e s ta n da r d s We know study abroad. As a long-established program, we know the ins and outs of France — its universities, its culture, its people. Our advisory board includes professors and administrators from a wide selection of colleges. They meet annually to evaluate the program and determine how to improve it year after year.

Time spent When you spend an entire year in the program, you’re able to become fluent in French and completely familiar with French life. A semester also provides good language and culture saturation. If you are considering the spring semester only, you will need excellent knowledge of the French language since you’ll be arriving at the university mid-year. All programs begin with a two-week preliminary session.

W h at ’ s y o u r m a j o r ? Some students are French majors, but the majority are studying in other disciplines, including art history, comparative literature, government, history, international relations, the sciences and others. Our flexible program allows you to find classes that fit your course of study. Once you successfully complete an academic year or semester, a transcript is sent to your home college or university.

Live well Immerse yourself in French life at home, in the classroom and in your surroundings. Most students stay in French homes where they often forge lasting relationships. We’ll also arrange diverse cultural experiences, from French dining and wine tastings to tours of historic sites and museums.

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d i s t i nc t i o ns O l d e s t i n Pa r i s Sweet Briar College Junior Year in France is the oldest coeducational intercollegiate program in Paris. Created in 1923 by the University of Delaware, this program has been administered by Sweet Briar College since 1948.

True Immersion Students are registered and take classes at various Paris universities, at the University of Nice, and at other institutes of higher learning and visual and performing arts.

S p e c i a l i z at i o n We only accept juniors or exceptional students (sophomores in their second semester or seniors in their first semester).

Choice Junior Year in France’s size enables us to offer many more academic opportunities than smaller study abroad programs.

Universities We have academic agreements with four Paris universities: Paris III (Sorbonne Nouvelle), Paris IV (Paris-Sorbonne), Paris VII (Denis Diderot) and Paris Dauphine University and with the University of Nice.

G ua r a n t e e d F e e Our fee is not subject to fluctuations resulting from variations in the value of the dollar.

I n c lu s i v e Pac k ag e The fees include trans-Atlantic transportation (to Paris only in fall), registration in several institutions, room and board, group excursions, medical and personal liability insurance, baggage handling and theatre and museum fees related to courses. Any expenses not included are clearly stated in our suggested budget.

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aca d e m i c p r o g r a m O r i e n tat i o n The preliminary orientation session is an introduction to the French way of life. It provides a practical knowledge of the language so you can readily use it in your studies. Most importantly, it initiates you to academic life in France. Orientation for students studying in Paris for the year will be held in Tours at the Institut d’Etudes Françaises de Touraine, a unit of the Université François-Rabelais. Tours provides a fuller introduction to the country and is a benefit of the yearlong and fall semester program. Orientation for those attending the spring semester in Paris and the whole year or spring semester in Nice will be held at the JYF offices in those respective cities. Your two-week orientation session will vary depending on your ability to read, write and speak French. It usually includes practical training in composition, translation and conversation. A recommendation for one unit of credit is made (equivalent to a semester course) for those who successfully complete the intensive orientation session for the yearlong program in Paris or Nice. During this time, you also meet with both the resident director and associate director to plan your academic calendar and living arrangements in Paris or Nice. These preliminary sessions are in addition to your class time and will include cultural experiences as well as visits to museums and historical landmarks.


semester or year program As you get started, all the details of your course of study are provided prior to departure so you can discuss and confirm your program with the faculty advisor at your home institution. We encourage you to set up individual programs that best correspond with your interests and the requirements of your major. Don’t worry. You’ll be able to try some courses before finalizing a schedule. Choices of where to study include: • Paris universities or the University of Nice • The Institut Catholique, the Alliance française, Language institutes (i.e., Instituto Cervantes) • One of the many ateliers or specialized schools of music and the performing arts • Junior Year in France, which offers several in-house courses in French

Internships Junior Year in France offers a limited number of internships in government, the press, agencies and science labs for those who are staying a second semester in Paris. Approval from your home institution, accompanied by a faculty sponsor is necessary. The internship includes a research paper and reports on a required lecture series for one unit of credit (three credit hours).

A ss i s ta n t s h i p s i n S e c o n d a ry S c h o o l s Students may volunteer to serve as assistants to French teachers of English. The amount of time involved varies from two to six hours per week. Although these assistantships carry no academic credit, they offer good opportunities for direct contact with French schools.

Learn. Work. Play. Your experiences won’t be limited to the classroom. S B C . ED U/J Y F

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{ 2010-2011 Courses through J un i o r Y e a r i n F r anc e } Since our aim is to integrate you into the regular French university life, we offer only a limited number of special courses. These courses aren’t available in the French system but are taught by French professors at the SBC JYF location. French language Atelier d’écriture: composition avancée (year)

French literature Littérature du 17e siècle (semester) Littérature du 18e siècle (semester)

French civilization Histoire de Paris à travers ses monuments (semester) (Go on walking tours throughout Paris including the Basilique Saint-Denis, l’hôtel Cluny, musée national du Moyen Âge, musée Carnavalet, l’hôtel des Invalides, musée d’Orsay, musée du Petit Palais.)

French Cinema Cinéma et littérature (semester)

Art history Panorama de la création artistique en France jusqu’au XVIIe siècle (fall semester) Paris, cupitale des arts XIXe-XXe (fall and spring semester) Histoire de l’art-Nice (Weekly class visits to the Louvre or the Musée d’Orsay.)

French theatre Théâtre et mise en scene (year or semester)

International Affairs La France dans l’Europe L’Union Européenne Systèmes internationaux

Sweet Briar College sponsors and directs the Junior Year in France study abroad program. Established in 1901, Sweet Briar is consistently named as a top college choice for women with more than 40 areas of study.

Experiencing France There are a number of excursions and social events we organize as a group. In the fall Paris program we visit the Loire Valley Châteaux, host a Seine River cruise, tour the Opéra Bastille, visit the catacombs, and journey to Provence to see Arles, Pont du Gard and Baux de Provence. We also go on a day trip to Reims to see the cathedral and the Pommery champagne caves. At Thanksgiving we serve up dinner at a Parisian restaurant. In the spring we take a day trip to Rouen, receive a guided experience at the Louvre and travel to Normandy to see Bayeux, American Cemetery, landing beaches, and Saint Malo. We alternate our trips to Mont Saint-Michel and Avignon between the fall and spring and some years change things and go to Strasbourg to see its cathedral and visit the Colmar art museum. For the Nice program we visit the beautiful cities of Villefranche, Eze, Grasse, Beaulieu, Antibes, Cannes and the ever-exciting Monte Carlo.

E x a m i n at i o n s Exams are taken at the end of the preliminary session and at end of each semester.


Grades The scale is 0 to 20 and converted to letter grades on your transcript. For art and performance, Distinction, Satisfactory or Unsatisfactory are given, often with a written evaluation.

Credit Once you have completed your work, we send a transcript of your grades to your home institution, recommending credits in units, normally nine for the year (one for the preliminary session and four for each semester) or five for fall semester and four for spring semester, although some colleges may require you to take more units. A unit is equal to a semester course. You can therefore hope to transfer between 27 and 32 hours of credit for the year, 12 to 16 for the semester, depending on your home institution’s policy.

C l ass At t e n d a n c e You are expected to attend classes regularly. In many courses, attendance is compulsory if credit is to be granted. Vacation periods are long and frequent enough — two weeks at Christmas, two weeks in spring (in Paris), plus a number of long weekends — to make requests to be excused from classes unnecessary. Most course work ends by the end of the third week in December for the first semester, and by late May for the second semester, although some might extend into early June.

P r o g r a m A dm i n i s t r at i o n You will be responsible to the resident director and the associate director whose authority ends when classes end. The resident director is the advisor on all academic matters. Once you are accepted, you agree to take a full program of study and to the administrative authority of both the resident director and the associate director. You’re a representative of your college and our country, so good conduct is expected.

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T r a v e l an d L i v i n g Detailed instructions concerning passport and visa application, handling of baggage, time and place of the group meeting prior to departure, and suggestions regarding clothing will be furnished. An informal reception for students, their parents, families and friends will be held at Washington Dulles International Airport on the day of departure for the Paris fall program. This is an opportunity to meet each other and Junior Year in France staff.

F l i g h t I n fo r m at i o n Group flights from Washington Dulles International Airport to Paris are scheduled in late August for the fall and yearlong Paris program only. If you prefer to travel independently to Paris, a request should be made when you apply or as soon as possible after admittance. Normally the price of the airline ticket will be deducted from the fall and yearlong Paris program fee. When you return, you’ll fly with a group or individually. Your return ticket is valid for one year. Students in the Nice program, and those studying in Paris in the spring, must make their own air travel arrangements and airfare is not included in the JYF program fees.

Living Arrangements In Tours, all our students live with French families, as do all those who wish to do so in Paris and in Nice. Our families are carefully selected and evaluated by students in the program every year. We look for host families who are truly interested in welcoming American students. In Paris and in Nice most students will have single rooms. Other housing options are available if you do not wish to stay with a French family. Requests for alternate living arrangements must be made at the time of application or soon after. { P r o g r a m a d v i s o r y c o m m i t t e e an d h o n o r a r y a d v i s o r s } Advisory Committee Institution Advisor Agnes Scott College..................................Professor Julia Knowlton Amherst College.......................................Professor Jay Caplan Brandeis University................................Professor Edward K. Kaplan Denison University..................................Professor Christine Armstrong Georgetown University............................Professor Deborah Lesko Baker Haverford College.....................................Professor David Sedley Hood College.............................................Professor Didier Course Kenyon College.........................................Professor Mary Jane Cowles Lafayette College......................................Professor George M. Rosa Miami, University of...............................Professor David Ellison Mount Holyoke College............................Professor Christopher Rivers Northwestern University.........................Professor Dominique Licops Princeton University...............................Dean Nancy Kanach

Washington University...........................Professor Colette Winn Wellesley College......................................Professor Vicki E. Mistacco Wheaton College.......................................Professor Cécile Danehy Williams College......................................Dean Laura McKeon

Honorary Advisors Institution Advisor Agnes Scott College..................................Professor Frances Clark Calder Brown University.....................................Professor Henry F. Majewski Bryn Mawr College..................................Professor Michel Guggenheim Denison University..................................Professor Arnold Joseph Harvard University.................................Professor Donald Stone Jr. Maryland, University of ........................Professor Madeleine B. Therrien Sweet Briar College..................................Professor Emile Langlois, Director emeritus, JYF 1984-2000

Randolph College......................................Professor Françoise Watts

Rice University........................................Professor Deborah H. Nelson Campbell, Chair

Texas at Austin, University of ..............Professor James F. M. Stephens

Southern California, University of..........................................Professor Atiyeh Showrai

Wheaton College.......................................Professor Janet T. Letts

Sweet Briar College..................................President Jo Ellen Parker Dean Amy Jessen-Marshall Professor Angelo Metzidakis

Dr. Beatrice P. Patt, Dean emeritus

Vassar College...........................................Professor Ruth D. Venable Williams College......................................Professor George Pistorius

Virginia, University of............................Professor Mary McKinley Washington and Lee University............Professor John A. Lambeth

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a d m i ss i o n { t h e app l i ca t i o n p r o c e ss } p r o g r a m dat e s Dates for Paris 2012-2013: • Year program: Aug. 22, 2012–May 31, 2013 • Fall semester program: Aug. 22, 2012–Dec. 16, 2012 • Spring semester program: Jan. 11, 2013–May 31, 2013

Dates for Nice 2012-2013: • Year program: Aug. 26, 2012–May 19, 2013 • Fall semester program: Aug. 26, 2012–Dec. 16, 2012 • Spring semester program: Jan. 11, 2013–May 19, 2013

W h o ca n a p p ly • Sophomores (who will be juniors while in France), both men and women, in good standing at an accredited four-year American college or university. • Two years of pre-college and two years of college French, normally including one or more literature, language or civilization courses beyond the intermediate level, or the equivalent. • A gpa of 3.0 is required, both overall and in college French courses. Students attending the spring semester only must have a gpa of 3.5.


• Able to adjust to new cultural and living experiences, mature, emotionally stable, and able to function well without constant supervision. • Strongly recommended by the host college’s French department, or a member of the Junior Year in France Advisory Committee and dean or other appropriate administrative official in charge of approving study abroad programs at your college. • Additional recommendations from your French professors and college administrators are necessary if you don’t meet these expectations.

A p p l i cat i o n Download a copy of the application at sbc.edu/jyf. We encourage you to submit your application by Oct. 15, 2011 (spring) and March 15, 2012 (fall). We’ll inform you of your acceptance soon after. Late applications will be considered on a space-available basis. There is a $50 non-refundable application fee. The application form provides space for: • recommendations from the French department • recommendation by the dean of the college or study abroad administrator • letter of evaluation and recommendation from your French professor • approval of terms and conditions by parents or guardian • brief health questionnaire (a health certificate signed by a physician will be required once you’re accepted)

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{ F i nanc i a l A i d } Need-based federal financial aid (Pell grants, Stafford loans, etc.) is available. State grants (from such states as Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont and the District of Columbia) may also be available. We encourage you to find other sources of funding as well. In 2010-2011 approximately $54,000 in direct JYF grants, ranging from $500 to $6,000 were made available to qualified students. This aid came from funds supported by friends and alumni of Junior Year in France and matching grants from corporations, as well as contributions to the financial aid operating budget.

A p p ly i n g fo r F i n a n c i a l A i d Your home institution will normally process the federal financial aid application. Be sure to contact the financial aid office, because many colleges allow institutional aid to be applied to the Junior Year in France. If you need assistance, let us know. To qualify for direct grants from the Junior Year in France, file a Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) or a “Renewal� FAFSA as soon as possible after Jan. 1. Mark both your home college and Sweet Briar College as recipients of the Student Aid Report (SAR). You will need to submit copies of your family income tax forms and a copy of your current financial aid offer from your college by March 15. Since our grant money is limited, late applicants may be denied a grant, although they may still be eligible for federal and state grants and loans.


{ m e d i ca l i nsu r anc e } The Junior Year in France fee includes membership in a medical insurance plan administered by Cultural Insurance Services International and underwritten by Ace American Insurance Company. Benefits include reimbursement of medical expenses in and out of hospital up to a maximum of $100,000, with a $0 deductible for each sickness or injury. The plan also provides for a maximum of $50,000 for medical evacuation or repatriation. It contains the customary exclusions. Coverage only applies when you are overseas. The policy is valid until Dec. 31 (fall) or June 30 (spring and full-year). If you’re planning to return to the U.S. later, please inform the Paris or Nice office to extend the insurance for a fee. Important: Since coverage only applies when you are overseas, it is strongly recommended that parents who have other policies continue protection so that one plan may supplement the other.

The Sweet Briar College Junior Year in France is an equal opportunity affirmative action institution and does not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, nationality, sex, age or disability. This non-discrimination policy covers admissions, financial aid awards, educational programs, services, activities and employment. The vice president for finance and administration is the affirmative action official at Sweet Briar College. The Junior Year in France complies with section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and accepts students with disabilities who can successfully pursue a demanding and rigorous program of study in France. Further information may be obtained from the Junior Year in France Office or the Office of the Dean at Sweet Briar College. The Dean of the College is designated to coordinate compliance with section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.

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{ F i nanc i a l A r r an g e m e n t s } Every effort is made to keep the cost of the Junior Year in France as low as rising prices and foreign exchange rates permit.

Fees Paris 2011-2012: • $37,900 full year • $20,000 fall • $19,500 spring

Nice 2011-2012: • $37,900 full year • $20,000 fall • $20,500 spring

2012-2013: • The fees will be announced in February 2012.

What fees include: • Tuition for courses receiving academic credit; ateliers (studio courses) • Lodging (nine months, full-year; four months, fall; four and a half months, spring) • Meals (breakfast seven days a week and dinner five or six days a week, except during Christmas and spring vacations) • Excursions • Medical insurance (including personal liability) • Airfare (for fall and yearlong Paris program attendees only)

What is not included: • Cost of textbooks and academic supplies • Independent art and music instruction, studio and piano rentals (except for music majors) • Travel insurance, passport or visa fees, or excess baggage


Paym e n t S c h e d u l e Make checks to Sweet Briar College Junior Year in France. Full-year students: • Upon acceptance: $500 • July 1: $19,500 • Nov. 1: $17,900

Semester students: • Upon acceptance: $500 • July 1 (fall): $19,500 • Nov. 1 (spring): $19,000/Paris; $20,000/Nice

As a convenience to parents, Sweet Briar College has made arrangements with Tuition Management Services and TuitionPay-SallieMae to facilitate payment terms for full-year and semester students. Some colleges and universities will collect fees for the Junior Year in France and forward them to us. Their schedule of payments may be slightly different from the above. They may add various fees.

Refunds Refunds are made only when withdrawal is requested by the Junior Year in France or the student’s college for academic or medical reasons. Only under such circumstances does the following schedule take place: Full-year students: • Before June 1: $250 • Between July 1 and Aug. 1: half of July payment • After Aug. 1: no refund

Semester students: • Before June 1 or Nov. 1: $250 • Before Aug. 1 or Dec. 1: half of July or December payment • Withdrawal after Aug. 1 or Dec. 1: no refund

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“ La v i e e s t b e l l e à N i c e ”


Since 1948 a total of 6,772 students representing 279 colleges and universities have been enrolled in the JYF program. { C o l l e g e s an d U n i v e r s i t i e s R e p r e s e n t e d } Agnes Scott ..................... 66 Alabama, U. of .................. 1 Alaska, U. of ......................2 Albertus Magnus .............3 Alfred .................................2 Allegheny .......................... 1 American U. ................... 11 Amherst .........................148 Arizona ..............................3 Assumption ....................... 1 Auburn .............................. 1 Austin ................................2 Babson College...................2 Baldwin-Wallace .............. 1 Bard ....................................5 Barnard ........................... 17 Bates ................................ 35 Beaver ................................ 1 Bennington ......................22 Bishop’s University ........... 1 Boston C. ..........................20 Boston U. ............................5 Bowdoin .......................... 34 Brandeis .......................... 67 Briarcliff ............................ 1 Bridgeport, U. of ............... 1 Brigham Young .................2 Brown .............................153 Bryn Mawr ................... 173 Bucknell ........................... 17 Butler .................................4 California: Berkeley ........................15 Davis ............................... 1 Los Angeles .................... 1 San Diego .......................2 Santa Barbara ...............5 Carleton ...........................20 Carnegie-Mellon ............... 1 Carroll (MT)...................... 2 Case Western Reserve... 46 Catholic U. of America.... 4 Cedar Crest....................... 1 Centre ................................. 1 Charleston C......................3 Chatham............................ 5 Chattanooga...................... 1 Cincinnati......................... 3 Clark (MA)........................ 6 Coe.......................................2 Colby ............................... 39 Colgate............................... 4 Colorado C. ......................13 Colorado State U............... 1 Colorado, U. of.................. 4 Columbia......................... 15 Connecticut C................ 115 Connecticut, U. of............. 1 Cornell ........................... 101

Dartmouth .......................31 Davidson............................ 8 Delaware............................ 3 Denison.......................... 145 Denver, U. of ...................... 1 DePauw............................. 1 Dickinson .........................13 Douglass ..........................19 Drew................................... 9 Duke................................ 60 Dunbarton ......................... 1 Earlham............................. 1 Elmira.............................. 15 Emmanuel ......................... 1 Emory ............................. 43 Emporia State U................ 1 Elon..................................... 1 Fairfield .............................7 Fordham.............................3 Florida, U. of..................... 1 Fort Wright....................... 1 Franklin & Marshall .....19 Fresno State...................... 1 Furman............................. 6 George Mason ................... 1 George Washington ..........9 Georgetown ................... 338 Georgia.............................. 4 Gettysburg......................... 1 Goddard............................. 1 Goucher ............................22 Grinnell ...........................13 Grove City ......................... 1 Guilford ............................. 1 Hamilton........................... 3 Hamline............................. 1 Hampden-Sydney............ 8 Hanover ............................. 1 Hartford, U. of................... 1 Harvard U.: Harvard C.................... 54 Radcliffe C. ................. 49 Haverford...................... 133 Hawaii............................... 5 Hendrix............................. 1 Hiram................................ 1 Hollins............................. 10 Holy Cross .......................20 Hood................................. 25 Illinois C. ........................... 1 Illinois, U. of...................... 3 Indiana.............................. 6 Iowa .................................... 1 Ithaca................................. 3 James Madison .................5 Johns Hopkins................ 26 Juniata.............................. 1 Kalamazoo.........................4 Kansas ...............................2

Kentucky ........................... 1 Kenyon............................ 84 Knox ...................................3 Lafayette ......................... 54 Lake Erie........................... 1 Lawrence........................... 9 Lebanon Valley................. 2 Lehigh................................ 4 Le Moyne............................3 Lewis & Clark ...................2 Longwood.......................... 1 Louisiana State................ 3 Louisville........................... 1 Lynchburg....................... 10 Maine................................. 5 Manhattanville .................4 Marietta............................. 2 Marquette.......................... 2 Mary Baldwin................ 22 Mary Washington, U. of.. 7 Maryland, U. of ..............16 Marymount....................... 2 Maryville (TN)................. 1 M.I.T.................................. 7 Massachusetts, U. of.......... 1 McGill ................................2 Memphis State .................. 1 Miami (OH)...................... 2 Miami, U. of.......................4 Michigan, U. of............... 28 Michigan State U............. 4 Middlebury..................... 46 Mills ................................. 10 Millsaps............................. 1 Minnesota.......................... 4 Mississippi ........................ 1 Missouri............................ 2 Moravian.......................... 11 Mount Holyoke............. 511 Muhlenberg....................... 7 Muskingum ....................... 1 New Hampshire............... 5 Newton............................... 3 New York, City U. Brooklyn .........................5 City ................................. 1 Hunter ............................ 1 Queens ............................2 New York, State U. of at Albany........................ 1 at Buffalo ........................ 1 at New Paltz ................... 1 New York U....................... 3 North Carolina, U. of Chapel Hill ................... 17 Greensboro..................... 5 North Dakota..................... 3 Northwestern................ 536 Notre Dame (CA).............. 1

Notre Dame (IN) ............... 1 Oberlin ............................ 30 Occidental......................... 8 Ohio State...........................8 Ohio Wesleyan.................. 9 Oklahoma.......................... 1 Oregon ..............................18 Oregon State...................... 1 Pennsylvania State.......... 8 Pennsylvania, U. of........ 19 Pittsburgh, U. of................. 1 Pomona.............................. 7 Princeton......................... 84 Principia (IL).................... 4 Providence..........................3 Radford .............................. 1 Randolph......................... 99 Redlands............................ 2 Reed .................................... 1 Rhode Island..................... 2 Rice .................................. 66 Richmond.......................... 2 Ripon .................................. 1 Rochester........................... 8 Rockford............................. 1 Rollins ................................4 Rosary ................................ 1 Rosemont........................... 1 Rutgers ...............................2 Russell Sage ......................6 Saint Catherine, C. of...... 2 Saint Francis.................... 1 Saint Lawrence................ 4 Saint Michael’s .................. 1 Saint Mary’s College of Maryland........................2 Salem ................................. 1 San Diego, U. of................. 1 San Francisco State U. .... 1 Santa Clara ....................... 1 Sarah Lawrence............... 1 Scripps ...............................6 Seton Hill........................... 2 Sewanee: South, U. of ....21 Simmons......................... 10 Skidmore ..........................24 South Carolina, U. of....... 9 South Dakota.................... 1 Southern California, U. of .. 148 Southern Connecticut ...... 1 Southern Methodist......... 4 Stanford............................ 11 Stephens............................ 1 Stonehill............................. 1 Suffolk U............................ 2 Swarthmore .....................14

Sweet Briar.................. 434 Syracuse............................ 6 Temple ................................ 1 Tennessee........................... 4 Texas A & M......................2 Texas, U. of..................... 36 Texas Christian................ 1 Thiel................................... 1 Transylvania U. ...............2 Trinity (CT) ....................27 Trinity (Wash, DC) ..........3 Trinity U. ........................13 Tufts ................................ 32 Tulane U.: Tulane U. .......................2 Newcomb C.................... 4 Union................................. 4 Utah, U. of ......................... 1 Vanderbilt ........................ 11 Vassar............................ 274 Vermont............................. 5 Villanova........................... 2 Virginia, U. of............... 120 Virginia Tech..................... 1 Wagner .............................. 1 Wake Forest...................... 1 Washington C................... 1 Washington & Jefferson.. 1 Washington and Lee ..... 59 Washington State............. 1 Washington U. (MO)...... 78 Washington, U. of............. 1 Wayne State ...................... 1 Wellesley ....................... 283 Wells................................. 41 Wesleyan .........................21 Western.............................. 2 Wheaton (IL)..................... 7 Wheaton (MA) ..............312 Whitman........................... 4 Whitworth.......................... 1 Whittier ...........................40 William & Mary............ 15 Williams........................ 154 William Smith.................. 4 Wilmington....................... 2 Wilson................................ 9 Wisconsin, U. ..................19 Wittenberg......................... 3 Wofford.............................. 1 Wooster............................ 32 Wright State ...................... 1 Wyoming, U. of................. 2 Yale................................ 291

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{ 2 0 1 0 - 2 0 1 1 an d 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2 J un i o r Y e a r i n F r anc Pa r i s 2 0 1 0 - 2 0 1 1 Agnes Scott College Lillian Charles, Women’s Studies/French Amherst College Diana Cao, English/French Rebecca Hu, French/Psychology Ellen Richmond, French/English Babson College Nina Milovanovic, International Business Environment Bates College Jonathan Aprea, Psychology/English Nora Brouder, English Clare Durkin, French Maura Neal, Psychology Bennington College Emily Reid, French/Literature Brandeis University Katherine Kolios, Health Science, Society & Policy

Miami, University Of Joseph Lasik, French/English* Lauren Phipps, French* Michigan State University Mary Niezgoda, French/International Health Studies Mount Holyoke College Jacqueline Lachevre, Economics Julita Penido, Astronomy Northwestern University Marcy Blattner, History Alexander Cohen, French/Economics Casey Hartley, Performance Studies Kristin Lawson, French/International Studies Lorraine Kwok-Yee Lee, Journalism/French Elizabeth Schulze, Journalism/ International Studies Alexandra Taskier, Political Science Lindsay Traiman, Communication Studies/Music Eleanor Vernon, History Jane Weiss, Learning/Organizational Change

California/Berkeley, University of Joycerine Yeu Lee, Economics*

Providence College Kathryn Van De Weghe, Political Science/French*

Connecticut College Natalie Doak, International Relations/Music Catherine Lawton, French/Mathematics

Rice University Allison Korinek, History/Linguistics Claire Schaffer, French Studies

Franklin & Marshall College Caitlin Regan, Creative Writing/French*

Southern California, University of Alyssa Bicos, French Anna Feldman, Economics/Mathematics/French Asher Frankfurt, French Clara Hill, International Relations/French Amara Hoshijo, French/Sociology Katherine Jeffery, History Natasha Neufeld, French/Art History Kerjan Wiehe, International Relations

Georgetown University Camila Chaudron, Art History/French Maria Edmundson, French Nora Updegrove, Government Eric Valchuis, History Grinnell College Jarrett Joubert, French Helen Lewandowski, Art History/French Haverford College Kelsey Capron, Biology Elizabeth Gallo, Biology Sarah Gibson, French Juliaty Hermanto, Sociology Glynis Kristal-Ragsdale, English Christine Long, French Alethea Rockwell, French Caitlin Ross, French Literature Allison Serpico, French Hood College Curtis Lane, French/Philosophy Colleen McCarrick, Business Management/ French Karmen Osei, Psychology/French Francesca Roth, French/Secondary Education Aubrey Shannon, French/Art History Matheson Sharp, French/Communication Arts Indiana University John Brown II, Mathematics/French Kenyon College Ian Curtis, French Literature Susannah Gruder, English Matthew Lasnoski, French Jessica Marroquin, Modern Languages & Lit. Matthew Witmer, Philosophy/French Area Studies Lafayette College Elizabeth Blake, Psychology/French Caroline Finden, Art History/French Zachary Pustejovsky, Mathematics/French Alexandra Trowbridge, Film Studies/Art History

Sweet Briar College Taler Echols, International Affairs/French Jordanne Ryan, English and Creative Writing Victoria Trudeau, Art History/English* Jordan Tudisco-Guntert, French/Economics Temple University Corinne Miller, French Secondary Education* Tufts University Jenna Strauss, Child Development/ Psychology Tulane University Anna Blum, Art History/French Vassar College Emma Michelson, Psychology Chesney Polis, English Virginia, University of Anna Kovatcheva, Literature/Fiction Writing Adrienne Ostroff, Mathematics/French* Washington and Lee University Martin Prichard, Physics/Engineering* Catherine Skitsko, English Washington University in St.Louis Cora Allen, Film & Media Studies Peter Bohlen, Comparative Literature/French Julia Horn, Art History Amanda Jacobowitz, International &Area Studies George King, Philosophy Sarah Saeli, Marketing/International Business Laurie Samay, Finance/French Lindsey Shapiro, English Lauren Vassiliades, Philosophy, Neuroscience, Psychology

Wellelsey College Yaba Armah, Economics/French Molly Eckel, Art History/French Samantha Nadal, Philosophy/French Justine Portmann, Art History/English Lucie Wall, French/History Wenqing You, Economics/Art History Andrea Zaldumbide, International Relations/ Political Science Wheaton College, IL Grace Hoi Wong, Music Performance Wheaton College, MA Sophie Bergelson, French Elizabeth Edwards, French Studies Blake Funston, Art History Sarah Geocaris, French/Music* Daniel Jong-Kyu Han, International Relations Heather Hanson, French Susannah Holt, Chemistry/French Emily Norris, Hispanic Studies/French Studies Christine Sobieck, History Sandra Szamalek, European History Whittier College Nicole Beauchamp, English Language & Literature/French Language & Literature Alexander Ikeda, French/Economics* Catherine King, English/French Veronica Moreno, French Linda Park, French/Art History Dylan Zukowski, French/English William & Mary, The College of Diana Ohanian, History Williams College John Guiffre, Political Science Mary Brunelli, French/English Katherine Rieger, Mathematics Wooster, The College of Frances Flynn, French Christopher Hanson, French Daniel Pierce, French Kathrin Reed, International Relations/French Yale University Robin Barawid, Economics*

Nice 2010-2011 Bates College Michelle Paquette, Theater/Art and Visual Culture James Madison University Sheridin Wright, Modern Foreign Lang./Dance Kenyon College Anna Becker, Sociology Le Moyne College Meghan Barry, French/Spanish Rice University Alicia Dugar, International Relations/ French Studies Anne Wawrose, Cognitive Science/ Computer Science Sweet Briar College Taler Echols, International Affairs/French Jordan Tudisco-Guntert, French/Economics Wheaton College Austin Davidson, French Studies Heather Hanson, French/Secondary Education Wooster, College Of Jacqueline Weixel, French/Anthropology YALE UNIVERSITY Elsie Sowah, French/English


anc e S t u d e n t s } pa r i s s u m m e r 2 0 1 1 DENISON UNIVERSITY Varuni Mirpuri, Economics/French COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY Elizabeth Brigham, Mathematics FRANKLIN & MARSHALL COLLEGE Jessica Poucel, French GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY Helena Landegger, French/Studio Art HAMPDEN-SYDNEY COLLEGE Andrew Hargroder, History HOOD COLLEGE Katelin Cep , Elementary & Special Education RANDOLPH COLLEGE Isabelle Dom, Dance/Global Studies Rice University Kelly Loudin, Chemical Engineering/French Studies Sweet Briar College Nicole Lee, Business WHITTIER COLLEGE Naomi Tarekegn, French Wooster, College Of Olivia Aspiras, Psychology YALE UNIVERSITY Christine Slomka, Literature

Pa r i s 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2 Amherst College Sarah Albert, American Studies Analena Alcabes, French Mari Crook, Economics Sarah Nyirjesy, Psychology/French Bates College Madeline Levitt, French/Psychology Lena Opper, Philosophy Catherine Zingale,Political Science Bennington College Justine Lenter, Languages/Visual Arts Brandeis University Ariel Glickman, Politics Altynay Kangeldiyeva, Economics Charleston, College of Sarah Morris, French Connecticut College Nicole Smalley, French Davidson College Sarah Thornton, French & Spanish Comparative Lit. Denison University Kaitlin Hayes, Biology/French Kasey Hoare, French Fordham University Craig Delisle, History Lucy Sutton, Studio Art Franklin & Marshall College Allison Wein, French George Washington University Jacques Christian Alexandre Leupin International Affairs Georgetown University Eric Bulakites, French/Sociology Margaret Johnson, Art History Haverford College Ralph Anthony Alexis, French Charlotte Bax, History Samuel Gant, Political Science/French Christopher Leung, Economics/French

Hood College Steven Davis, French Francesca Roth, French Johns Hopkins University Victoria Bata, French/Writing Seminars Anna Salzman, French/History of Art Kenyon College Adrian Natale, Modern Languages/Anthropology Lynchburg College Reid Taylor, Economics/French Northwestern University Hannah Bricker, Journalism Claire Brown, Journalism Elizabeth Gore, French/International Studies Madison Loew, Communications/International Studies Eliza Montgomery, History Lauren Rodosky, English Literature/ International Studies

NI C E 2 0 1 1 - 2 0 1 2 HAVERFORD COLLEGE Carolina Arias, Romance Languages Sara Taggart, Psychology Alice Thatcher, Growth & Structure of Cities JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY Philip Ramunno, French/Behavioral Biology SWEET BRIAR COLLEGE Nicole Lee, Business WILLIAMS COLLEGE Bryn Dunbar, History WOOSTER, THE COLLEGE OF Joseph Dziedziak, French/English

Ohio Wesleyan University Hung Quoc Huynh, Economics/French Providence College Jaclyn Kotowski, French Rachael White, French Rice University Oluwadamilayo Olamidun Obamehinti, Biological Sciences/French Studies Andrea Romero, Art History/Economics Yahaira Verdejo, Economics/Psychology Song Yen Ruby Yeh, French Studies Sewanee: The University of the South Martha Gibbs, English Southern California, University Of Guergana Borissova, International Relations Manon Wilson, French/Linguistics

{ C o n tac t i n g Students } Students enrolled in the fall 2011 semester or the 20112012 full-year program may be contacted by prospective students, as follows:

Tufts University Sarah Davis, International Relations Sarah Schiferl, International Relations/French Natalia Vasquez, International Relations

Tours (from Aug. 26-Sep. 10)

Washington and Lee University Parker Chambers, Romance Languages/ Art History Mary Morten, Sociology/French Katharine Price, Accounting/Business Admin.

Institut de Touraine,

Washington University in St. Louis Basia Michalski, French

Paris (after Sept. 10)

(Student’s name) Sweet Briar College 1, rue de la Grandière 37000 Tours France

(Student’s name)

Wellelsey College Jiwon Hahn, Comparative Literature Julia Orlov, Art History

Sweet Briar College

Wheaton College, MA Madeline Bailis, Art History Elisabeth Fifer, Art History/French Alexia Rempoutzakou, Art History Elizabeth Sorgi, French

France

34, rue de Fleurus 75006 Paris

Nice (after Aug. 30) (Student’s name)

Whittier College Julia-Ellen Spruill-Smith, English/French

Sweet Briar College, Junior Year in Nice

Williams College Laura Henry, Political Science Catherine Lamb, Art History/French Anna Silberstein, Spanish/French

Université de Nice

Wooster, The College of Baba Badji, French/English

Campus Saint Jean d’Angély 24 avenue des Diables bleus 06357 Nice Cedex 4 France

* 2010 summer program students (June 5-July 5, 2010)

List accurate as of Aug. 1, 2011.


junior year in france Sweet Briar, Virginia 24595 (434) 381-6109 (434) 381-6283 FAX SBC.EDU/JYF • jyf@sbc.edu


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