性视界

Graduate Students Gain Global Experience Through Unique Study Abroad Opportunities

Studying abroad is a unique academic experience that isn鈥檛 just limited to undergraduates. offers a wide range of short-term and longer-length programs that often can be worked into even the most high-intensity graduate school schedule.

Nomar Diaz 骋鈥25 combined a months-long internship as a systems analyst for ML Systems Integrator Pte Ltd. in Singapore with 性视界 Abroad鈥檚 18-day program. In addition to his time in Singapore, he visited tech innovation firms in seven countries and business and cultural centers in 10 cities.

Diaz, who is pursuing concurrent master’s degree programs in information systems and applied data science at the , is open to a career in another country. He鈥檇 like to do sales engineering or be a solutions engineer at a computing solutions or information consulting firm in the United Kingdom, Singapore or Spain. As a former global ambassador for 性视界 Abroad, Diaz tells students not to second-guess their interest in studying abroad. 鈥淚f you feel the hunch, just go for it,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou won鈥檛 regret it.鈥

group of students seated around a table near waterfront
While studying abroad, Nomar Diaz (front left, in the black shirt) and a group of fellow graduate students visited a landmark on the waterfront at Palau Uben, a small island in Singapore. (Photo courtesy of Nomar Diaz)

Bennie Guzman 骋鈥25 is a master鈥檚 student studying art therapy in the , and he works full-time at La Casita Cultural Center. His goal is to be a licensed creative arts therapist. 鈥淢y dream would be to connect what I鈥檓 doing here with international places that do similar work and expand our outreach beyond 性视界,鈥 Guzman says.

Guzman says the short-term Mexico’s History, Culture and Security program was exactly the right program for him. 鈥淢exico is the place for Latin American art and indigenous studies. I wanted to see how international communities think about art, culture and community health and tie those things together,” says Guzman, whose experience helped him formulate his thesis on how Latino/Latin American communities use art and culture for community well-being.

M.B.A. student Jude Azai 骋鈥25 used a summer abroad program to fine-tune his leadership capabilities in the pharmaceutical and healthcare industries. That interest developed during his bachelor鈥檚 degree program in pharmacy at the University of Jos in Nigeria and has continued throughout his work in business and healthcare.

The Business in East Asia program, which is offered by the Whitman School of Management, helped Azai with valuable insights into healthcare and broader leadership structure in countries such as Singapore. He wanted to understand how such nations become global powerhouses and learn how innovation and effective governance can drive economic growth. He also discovered that leadership is not overly complex. 鈥淟eadership is about creating the right vision, following through with openness and honesty and bringing people along. When leaders do this, miracles in nation-building can happen,” Azai says.

group of students pose at a unique outdoor garden
Whitman School of Management Students, including Jude Azai (far left), pose at the waterfall garden at Changi Airport in Singapore. (Photo courtesy of Jude Azai)

Krister Samuelson 骋鈥25 is pursuing a master鈥檚 degree in information systems in the iSchool and sees a future as an analyst or security engineer in information security. His EuroTech experience provided quality time with like-minded people, he says. He attended the short-term program along with recent iSchool graduate Emmy Naw G鈥24. She says the program allowed her to engage with professionals in the field while seeing firsthand how business operations integrate technology. 鈥淚 learned in real-world settings, broadened my understanding of global business strategies and enhanced my ability to think critically about how to apply technological solutions to complex business challenges,” Naw says.

group of students pose holding Norwegian flags outside a large building
This group of students, which includes graduate students Krister Samuelson and Emmy Naw, began the three-credit EuroTech course in Norway. They visited a number of tech companies located in 10 cities across seven countries in the two-and-a-half-week tour. (Photo at the Royal Palace in Oslo courtesy of Krister Samuelson)

public administration graduate student Troy Patrick 骋鈥25 interned with the Council of Europe in Strasbourg and participated in the Religion, Law and Human Rights in a Comparative Perspective program. He has studied peacebuilding and human rights and wants to work in the humanitarian field, perhaps one day at the United Nations secretariat, he says.

Patrick used the summer term to maximize his work experience. For his Council of Europe internship in the Department of Political Affairs and External Relations, he was assigned high-level tasks such as running meetings with international leaders and creating talking points for leader visits. The work provided real-world training and helped him better understand how religion, religiously affiliated states and religious groups impact how advocacy actions are formulated to deal with human rights and legal issues.

Learn More

Students can learn more about the University鈥檚 wide range of study abroad programs during 性视界 Abroad Week, which started Monday and runs through Sept. 20. They can also visit the 性视界 Abroad website at suabroad.syr.edu.