GermanyThe Virginia Military Institute, in
partnership with Studienforum Berlin, is pleased to present two
summer four-week programs in Berlin, the capital of Germany.
Dates: May 18 - June 17,
2013
2013 Cost: $4900, excluding
airfare (Subject to BOV approval)
Fees include tuition, books,
accommodation with host families, two meals/day, public transportation (pass
for the subway, trams and buses), sightseeing tours in Berlin and Potsdam,
excursion to Weimar and Buchenwald, museum entrance fees, as well as airport
pick-up and drop-off service. International airfare is not
included.
Program Director
Mrs. Patricia Hardin, who has been
teaching German at VMI since 2000, will serve as the Program Director. Mrs.
Hardin, who was born in communist Romania, immigrated to Germany when she was
10 years old and spent many years living, and attending school, in Germany
until coming to the US to attend college at Wake Forest University in 1984. She
received her Masters degree in Germanic Languages and Literature from the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Eligibility
Any current student in good standing
with an accredited university is eligible to apply. VMI students need only
submit an application. Applicants from other universities should include a
faculty letter of recommendation, an official transcript, and a short essay
outlining the applicant's personal and academic goals for the program, along
with the application. Applications must
be received no later than 31 January 2013.
Program Option 1: German Language
Program
- 4 weeks of formal language and culture instruction.
Students will be living with German
families. This allows students to practice and reinforce their German language
skills with native speakers and allows them to see German culture ‘up close and
personal.’ Students will share two meals a day with their German family.
Language
instruction will be provided by Die Neue Schule, one of the best known
language schools in Berlin. Die Neue Schule has earned the status of a
"Supplementary Private School" and is supervised by the Berlin
Government. The school is located in a quiet residential area within walking
distance to the heart of Berlin and to the subway stations. The modern classrooms
are equipped with the latest instructional technologies.
The
language instruction portion of the academic program will consist of four weeks
of formal German language instruction (80 contact hours), at the 200- and
300-level, conducted in Berlin at the Die Neue Schule. Students who
successfully complete the course of instruction will earn six credit hours in
German.
In Berlin,
some of the culture lectures, as well as some of the cultural tours, will be
provided by Dr. Hanns D. Jacobsen, a long-time resident of Berlin who has
published extensively on international political and economic issues, including
the subject of European integration.
The
cultural portion of the academic program will consist of weekly lectures
addressing specific cultural topics followed by weekly topic-specific
excursions in Berlin and other German areas. As part of this cultural program,
students will learn about Imperial and Nazi Germany as they visit the Jewish
Museum and the Nazi concentration camp Buchenwald. They will learn about the division
and re-unification of Germany as they visit the former German Democratic
Museum, Checkpoint Charlie, and the Stasi prison Hohenschönhausen as well as
cities such as Dresden, previously under the “iron curtain.” They will
experience the cultural life of contemporary Germany as they visit contemporary
art exhibits and concerts, and shop at the most trendy boutiques and one of the
largest department stores in Europe, KaDeWe. Since Berlin is the capital
city of Germany, students will learn about the German government and political
system through a visit to the Reichstag, the German Capital Building.
Students will alsovisit the Sanssouci Palace, the summer residence of the Prussian
King Frederick the Great, and the Cecilienhof Palace, site of the 1945
Potsdam Conference.
The program also offers one optional weekend excursion
to the Southwestern part of Germany as well as to the Alsace region in France.
This optional excursion includes a day trip to the Black Forest for the
customary German hiking (Wandern). The group will take a car ferry across the
famous Rhine River. The first stop on this day trip is a guided tour at the
Maginot Line Museum followed by a visit to Colmar, a typical Alsacien city.
There, the group will visit the museum of Auguste Bartholdi, creator of the
Statue of Liberty and will dine on the typical meal of Tarte Flambée
(Flammenkuchen).
Program Option 2: Engineering
Program
- No foreign language requirement
- Col Michael Hardin will be teaching two Mechanical
Engineering Courses
- ME 302 - Dynamics
- ME487X - Global Engineering
List of
excursion in conjunction with the Global Engineering class:
- Science Park
Adlershof
- BMW Motorcycle
Plant
- Siemens
- Transparent VW
Factory in Dresden, Germany
- Technical
University Berlin
- Frauenhofer
Institute of Production Systems and Design Technology
- Museum of German
Technology
Students will be living with German
families who speak English. This allows students to see German culture ‘up
close and personal.’ Students will share two meals a day with their German
family.
The engineering
classroom is located in a quiet residential area within walking distance to the
heart of Berlin and to the subway stations.
As part of the engineering cultural
program, students will learn about Imperial and Nazi Germany as they visit the
Jewish Museum and the Nazi concentration camp Buchenwald. They will learn about
the division and re-unification of Germany as they visit the former German
Democratic Museum, Checkpoint Charlie, and the Stasi prison Hohenschönhausen as
well as cities such as Dresden, previously under the “iron curtain.” They will
experience the cultural life of contemporary Germany as they visit contemporary
art exhibits and concerts, and shop at the most trendy boutiques and one of the
largest department stores in Europe, KaDeWe. Since Berlin is the capital
city of Germany, students will learn about the German government and political
system through a visit to the Reichstag, the German Capital Building.
Students will alsovisit the Sanssouci Palace, the summer residence of the Prussian
King Frederick the Great, and the Cecilienhof Palace, site of the 1945
Potsdam Conference.
The program
also offers one optional weekend excursion to the Southwestern part of Germany
as well as to the Alsace region in France. This optional excursion includes a
day trip to the Black Forest for the customary German hiking (Wandern). The
group will take a car ferry across the famous Rhine River. The first stop on
this day trip is a guided tour at the Maginot Line Museum followed by a visit
to Colmar, a typical Alsacien city. There, the group will visit the museum of
Auguste Bartholdi, creator of the Statue of Liberty and will dine on the
typical meal of Tarte Flambée (Flammenkuchen).