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Studying in Europe
Guidance and insights for American students exploring full university degree programs across Europe.


Grants and Scholarships for American Students Studying in Europe
Grants and scholarships can help some American students studying in Europe, but funding varies by country, university, degree level, citizenship status, and award rules. This article explains why families should understand scholarships as part of the broader total cost picture.


What Parents Should Know Before Their Child Studies in Europe
Parents considering Europe for a full degree often have questions beyond admissions. This article explains what families should understand about independence, cost, housing, support, recognition, communication, and daily life before a child studies abroad.


What Daily Life Looks Like for American Students at European Universities
Daily life at European universities can feel different from the traditional American campus model. This article explains what American families should understand about housing, meals, transportation, social life, practical routines, independence, and living in another country.


Public vs Private Universities in Europe: What American Families Should Understand
Public and private universities in Europe do not always mean the same thing they do in the United States. This article explains how recognition, cost, student support, program structure, communication, and country context can shape the comparison for American families.


Can Homeschool Students Apply to Universities in Europe?
Homeschool students can be strong candidates for universities in Europe, but their academic records may need to be clear, credible, and easy for international admissions offices to understand. This article explains what American homeschool families should know about transcripts, outside validation, academic direction, and documentation.


English-Taught Bachelor’s Degrees in Europe: What American Students Should Know
English-taught Bachelor’s degrees can make studying in Europe more accessible for American students, but language of instruction is only one part of fit. This article explains what families should understand about programs, academics, daily life, support, and international student communities.


Which Master’s Degree Fields Make the Most Sense for Americans Studying in Europe?
Not every Master’s degree field works the same way for American students studying in Europe. This article explains which fields may translate well internationally, which areas require more caution, and why academic fit and prior Bachelor’s preparation matter.


Which Bachelor’s Degree Fields Make the Most Sense for Americans Studying in Europe?
Not every Bachelor’s degree field works the same way for American students studying in Europe. This article explains which fields may translate well internationally, which areas require more caution, and why academic fit matters when choosing a European degree program.


Can American Students Get Internships in Europe?
Internships in Europe can be valuable for American students, but opportunities vary by country, university, field of study, language ability, citizenship status, work rules, and student initiative. This article explains what families should understand before assuming internships are automatic.


Master’s Degrees in Europe: What American Students Should Know
Master’s degrees in Europe can offer American students focused graduate study, English-taught programs, international experience, and different cost and program structures. This article explains what students should understand before comparing European graduate options.


Why European Universities Often Expect Earlier Academic Specialization
European universities often expect students to choose a specific academic field earlier than many American colleges. This article explains why earlier specialization exists, how it affects degree structure and admissions expectations, and what American families should understand.


How European Universities Evaluate American High School Students
European universities may evaluate American high school students differently from U.S. colleges. This article explains how transcripts, APs, course rigor, testing, subject preparation, and program-specific academic readiness can shape the evaluation process.


How American High School Students Can Prepare for Universities in Europe
American high school students considering universities in Europe may need to think carefully about coursework, AP classes, grades, subject alignment, testing, and academic direction. This article explains how sophomores, juniors, and seniors can build stronger preparation before applying abroad.


What Surprises American Families Most About Universities in Europe
American families are often surprised by how different universities in Europe can feel from U.S. colleges. This article explains common differences involving admissions, housing, tuition, student independence, support services, city-based university life, and expectations.


How Independent Are Students at European Universities?
Student independence at European universities can look very different from the American college model. This article explains how students may manage academics, housing, transportation, budgeting, social life, and support more independently while studying in Europe.


European University vs. American College: What’s Actually Different?
European universities and American colleges can offer very different student experiences. This article explains key differences in academic structure, campus life, housing, independence, classroom expectations, social life, and how families can think about fit.


How Student Housing in Europe Differs From U.S. College Dorms
Student housing in Europe often works very differently from U.S. college dorms. This guide explains how residences, private rentals, shared apartments, housing availability, transportation, daily routines, and independence can shape the experience for American students studying abroad.


How EU Dual Citizenship Can Help American Students Study in Europe
EU dual citizenship can affect how American students apply to and study at universities in Europe. This guide explains how citizenship status may influence tuition classification, residency and visa requirements, mobility across countries, university options, and planning considerations for dual-citizen families.


Can Americans Use 529 Plans, FAFSA, and Federal Financial Aid to Study in Europe?
American families considering Bachelor’s degrees in Europe often ask whether FAFSA, 529 plans, federal student loans, and other forms of U.S. financial aid can still be used abroad. This guide explains how financial aid eligibility may work at European universities and what families should understand before making financial decisions.


Why Some European Bachelor’s Degrees Take 3 Years Instead of 4
Learn why some European Bachelor’s degrees take three years instead of four, how European university systems differ from the U.S., and what American families should understand before choosing a program abroad.
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