Spring Quarter, 2025
Study abroad in central Rome puts over 2,000 years of history at your doorstep. Be a part of the community, not just a tourist, taking courses and living in the Eternal City for one quarter. The city will become your classroom with relevant academic field trips and cultural activities. In your free time, enjoy relics of ancient Roman Empire, treasures of the Renaissance and Baroque masterpieces on every corner as well as the delights of Italian culture and cuisine in the ristorantes, cafes and gelaterias.
Information Session: Wednesday, October 23 at 3:00-4:00pm, Pacific Time.
Dates & Deadlines
- Program Travel Dates: March 27 - May 30, 2025
- Application & Deposit ($450) Deadline: Friday, January 31, 2025
- NOTE: to participate in the Rome, Italy program, students must be 18 years old or older by the program start date.
- Early Bird Deadline: Apply by Friday, October 31, 2024 & save $100!
- Balance of Program Fees Due: Friday, March 7, 2025
- Tuition Due: Check your campus’s calendar
Academic Program
This is an academic study program. Students are required to take 15 credits in the following courses.
Lead Faculty
Elizabeth Donley, Clark College
Elizabeth Donley has a long history with Italy, beginning as a student in an undergraduate exchange program in Florence, Italy where she studied Italian art, language, and literature. Since then, Elizabeth has returned to the country many times, teaching as the primary instructor for WCCCSA in Florence, Italy in 2013 and most recently, supporting her college-aged daughters on their own exchanges, travel, and work in Italy. She also hosted an Italian exchange student in her home in Portland, Oregon last year. Her travel in the country is extensive; she has explored from the north to the south of the country, including stays in Sicily and Sardinia. Traversing by plane, train, car, and ferry, she has seen many of the major sites and areas far less known.
She earned an MFA in creative writing and an MA in English (emphasis literature) from Chapman University and a BA in political science with a minor in Italian from DePaul University. She is a tenured professor of English at Clark College, where she teaches fiction writing, composition, and literature courses. She also co-directed the award-winning student art and literary journal, Phoenix, and taught a literary production class in tandem with the Art Department for several years. For the last 10 years, she has also held the position of English Division Chair, where she has helped reshape English course placement and the composition curriculum using an equity lense to help close achievement gaps and increase student success rates.
Outside the classroom, Elizabeth is a fiction writer whose work has appeared in a variety of publications and has been honored with an Oregon Literary Fellowship, a Caldera Residency, and an Elizabeth George Foundation. A former competitive gymnast and gymnastics coach, she is an avid sports fan who catches Chicago Cubs games every summer in her home city of Chicago. In the Pacific Northwest, some of her favorite activities include hiking, tending to her vegetable garden, and crafting creative culinary dishes. She also takes part in an Italian language meet-up group and loves to attend local cultural events, from dance performances to live theater, music, and author readings. Although her daughters are nearing adulthood and attending college across the country, she is forever a devoted mother who couldn’t be prouder of the children she raised.
Course Descriptions
Note: Course numbers will vary by home college. Check with your study abroad cordinator.
Italian Life and Culture Course (5 credits)
Taught by local qualified guest lecturers focusing on historical, political, economic, and cultural aspects of Rome and Italy. Local faculty will assign work and grades for the course.
This is an academic program and students are required to enroll in a full-time course load (15 credits). Failure to participate in the academic coursework may result in dismissal from the program. Students are encouraged to make the most of their classroom learning as it will enhance understanding of all the local area has to offer.
English &112: Intro to Fiction Writing (5 credits)
This literature class focuses on works of short fiction by Italian and mainly Roman writers. Moving chronologically starting in Ancient Rome, we will use Rome as a textbook. When we read the writer Ovid, for example, we’ll visit ancient sites like the Forum. As we move to the Renaissance, we’ll read Giorgio Vasari’s account of Michelangelo, diving into the exaggerations, the fiction, he constructed of the man who created the Sistine Chapel. We’ll do the same with Benvenuto Cellini’s writing, exploring his own account of when Rome was sacked by troops sent by Charles V, and he defended the city at Castel Sant’Angelo. In the 20th century, we’ll read short stories by Natalia Ginzberg, whose works were often an affront to Mussolini’s Italy. We’ll finish with the American-Indian writer, Jhumpa Lahiri, who now calls Rome her home and writes exclusively in the Italian language. All these works will allow us to explore Rome more in-depth, looking at its origins and then moving throughout history to contemporary times, where we see an international metropolis that still retains much of its historical past yet is trying to adapt to the many changes the 21st century has brought.
English &236: Creative Writing (5 credits)
Fiction writers have been visiting Italy for years for inspiration. Mark Twain, Ernest Hemingway, Elizabeth Gilbert, and Anthony Doerr are just a few, but the list is much longer than that. Using these expat writers as our guide, this class will focus on writing fiction with Rome (and Italy) as our inspiration. Conducted in a writing workshop format, students will write fiction, read published fiction, and critique the fiction of their peers. Students will use Rome to set at least one work of fiction, and writing exercises will take us onto the cobblestone streets of the city, so students can really capture the flavor and feel of this magical and historic city. We’ll also explore the concept of imitation and look at some famous work that have been shaped by stories already written (like the Roman mythology that was adapted from Greek mythology) and consider how best to use imitation in our own writing. At the end of the course, students will organize a reading of their work, choosing a place in Rome to hold the reading and working together to plan the event. For those who have already completed Creative Writing I, there will be an option to enroll in an Advanced Fiction Writing class with some additional requirements.
Campus & Classrooms
Classes will be held at the AIFS Student Center, which is centrally located and a short walk from the student apartments. The school is located in the city center, just steps from the Vatican.
Wi-fi is available throughout the Study Center; students and faculty also have access to computers and a printer, projector, white boards, etc.
Housing
Students will stay in self-catered apartments in a central location near the Vatican. Typically, each two-to-three-bedroom apartment is shared by four-to-six WCCCSA students on a twin-bedded basis. Students will have a shared kitchen and living space. Bed linen and wireless internet are provided. Apartments are within a short 10-20 minute walk of the AIFS Student Center.
Transportation
An unlimited one-month public transportation pass is provided for all students on this program. The pass is good for the metro, bus, train, and trams within the central zone of Rome. After the first month, students can recharge the pass at their own expense. Students are responsible for ground transportation from the airport in Rome to their apartments (instructions will be provided).
Excursions/Activities
Included in the program students will have:
- Reserved entrances to the Roman Forum, Palatine Hill and Colosseum, and the Vatican Museums and Sistine Chapel with a professional, English-speaking guide.
- Half-day excursion to Tivoli including round-trip private transportation, entrance to Hadrian’s Villa and the services of a professional, English-speaking guide.
- Program of free and subsidized cultural activities including activities such as walking tours, opera tickets, a sporting event, museum visits, and cooking and wine appreciation classes.
Optional three-day, two-night excursion to Sorrento and Pompeii for an extra cost including:
- Round-trip transportation by train or private bus, two nights’ accommodation in multi-bedded rooms in a centrally-located hotel on a bed and breakfast basis, entrance to Pompeii with a professional, English-speaking guide, plus a day excursion to Capri. This excursion is available for a supplemental fee of $625 based on a minimum of 15 paying participants.
Independent Travel
You are free to use your weekends to explore new neighborhoods in Rome, or take short train trips to other cities in Italy. Or you may even choose to leave the country and travel to Europe’s great cities including London, Amsterdam, Barcelona, and Paris.
Included
- Accommodation in a shared, self-catered apartment (centrally located) with wireless internet
- 24-hour on-call service in Rome for duration of program
- Pre-departure orientation and onsite orientation
- Travel Pass for unlimited travel on buses, trains, and metro in central Rome for 1 month
- Welcome meal and local walking tour
- Comprehensive Health Insurance
- A dedicated AIFS Program Coordinator to ensure smooth program experience
- Free internet access and printing facilities in AIFS Student Center
- Reserved entrances to the Roman Forum, Palatine Hill and Colosseum, and the Vatican Museums and Sistine Chapel with a professional, English-speaking guide.
- Half-day excursion to Tivoli including round-trip private transportation, entrance to Hadrian’s Villa and the services of a professional, English-speaking guide.
- Program of free and subsidized cultural activities including activities such as walking tours, opera tickets, a sporting event, museum visits, and cooking and wine appreciation classes.
Not Included
- Round-trip airfare and in-country transfers
- College tuition & fees for 15 credits
- Course books/materials
- Passport & visa fees, if applicable
- Meals not mentioned above
- Personal expenses
- Additional excursions and fieldtrips to those listed
- Anything not specified as included in the program
- Optional personal effects coverage and medical insurance upgrade
Scholarships
WCCCSA Rome participants are all eligible for one of three $1,000 . Applications are due on or before Friday, January 31, 2025.
Pre-Departure Orientation (mandatory)
When: Saturday, February 22, 2025
Where: TBD
Time: 10am-3pm
What to bring to Orientation:
- Signed copy of the Student Guidelines
- Copy of your passport
- Flight itineraries
- Notepad and pen to take notes
- And questions
You should also invite parents, guardians, or whomever you feel should attend with you. Coffee will be provided in the morning and lunch will be included. The faculty will be available to discuss their courses and expectations.