If you are going to be studying abroad in Germany, unless you are part of a program which specifically registers your in advance for specific courses or a plan of study, you will have to register after you arrive in Germany. When you do so, depending on the university and the timing of your arrival, how you go about this will likely be different than you are used to back home.
Read MoreIn the U.S., once you start a degree or study program, your continued registration in the program, assuming you are earning passing grades and don't have any other extenuating circumstances, is essentially automatic. Obviously, you still have to pay your tuition and any other fees to continue, but your studentship is not otherwise in question. In Germany, you have to rematriculate every semester, and you're on your own to make sure it happens.
Read MoreOne of the reasons that many people give as to why studying abroad is difficult for them is the costs associated with doing so. I was lucky enough during my time studying abroad during my undergraduate studies to receive a scholarship from my college, which helped to defray the costs. The Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst (DAAD) is the German government's organization which exists to provide scholarships for foreigners to study within Germany, and for Germans to study internationally. If you are American but aren't a dual citizen of a European country (and therefore are ineligible for the ERASMUS program for European students studying in other European countries), then applying for one of the programs through the DAAD is the primary option.
Read MoreWhen you're looking ahead to the exams that you are going to take while in Germany, it's worth looking into the number of points that a given module, lecture, or seminar is worth, as unlike many U.S. colleges and universities, there is not usually a set number of courses that you have to take in a semester to reach "full time" student status. Germany, as with the rest of Europe, operates on the European Transfer Credit System (ECTS), and assigns a point value to each lecture (exam), seminar (presentation or essay), and lab course (lab report).
Read MoreWhen you start at a Germany University, there are a lot of notable differences, from a total lack of a "traditional" campus, to oddities in exam registration, to the total lack of orientation courses for new students. Even for international students, exchange students, and, yes, brand new German university students. What are you to do?
Read MoreWhen you register for a college or university course in the U.S., do you expect to have to register for the exam separately from registering for the course you're taking? Of course not! The registration for the course and the exam are one and the same. Depending on what and where you are studying in Germany, this is likely not to be the case however.
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