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New study abroad program sends students to live in a Victorian manor near London

New study abroad program sends students to live in a Victorian manor near London

Photo: Clarksville Now


CLARKSVILLE, Tenn (CLARKSVILLENOW) – If you take the train an hour north from London to the town of Grantham, where Sir Isaac Newton once studied, you’ll discover an ornate Victorian estate hidden deep in the countryside. Harlaxton Manor inspires thoughts of fictional places like Downtown Abbey and Hogwarts Castle with its lush gardens and expansive green lawns. It will also be home to a select number of APSU students thanks to a new study abroad program.

For the last 48 years, the University of Evansville has used the manor for its top-rated study abroad program, and in the early 1990s, Dr. Marissa Chandler spent a year as a college student living in the opulent country home.

“It was a dream come true,” Chandler, now director of study abroad and international exchange at Austin Peay State University, said. “It’s owned by the University of Evansville, and I was able to study there and have an amazing experience.”

Chandler’s time at Harlaxton transformed her life, turning her into a world traveler whose passport is filled with stamps. Feeling nostalgic for her days at Harlaxton, Chandler began work on a partnership between Austin Peay and Evansville. Next summer, that partnership will come to fruition when Austin Peay unveils its new signature study abroad program – APSU’s British DEAL (Discovery, Exploration, Adventure, Learning) – which will send students to live in Harlaxton Manor for a week, followed by a week in London.

“We’re very happy to be partnering with the No. 1 program in the country,” Dr. Mickey Wadia, APSU professor of languages and literature, said. “Harlaxton is a Victorian manor home but it resembles a castle in many ways. It’s absolutely exquisite on the inside. I mean, who has classes for God’s sake in a Victorian manor.”

Get them early in their academic career

Austin Peay will begin its signature program next May by offering two classes at Harlaxton – a world literature class taught by Wadia, and a global business class taught by Dr. Victoria McCarthy, chair of the Department of Management, Marketing and General Business. Part of what makes the program unique is that the world literature class is a general education core course that most students take within their first two years, regardless of their major.

“A lot of students get into their academic career and they really have a lot of class and coursework obligations, so they can’t really find room or time to do a study abroad program,” Dr. Tim Hudson, executive director of the APSU Center for Extended and International Education, said. “The idea is to get them early in their academic career so any student majoring in anything can take Dr. Wadia’s literature course and have the advantage of this program.”

The learning never stops

While in Harlaxton, the students will visit sites such as the Triumph Motorcycle factory and Leicester Cathedral, where Richard III’s recently discovered remains were reburied. The next week in London, where the program will relocate to the Royal National Hotel, Wadia’s students will visit literary sites like the Bloomsbury district and Shakespeare’s Globe theater on London’s Bankside, as well as a field trip to the Bard’s picturesque hometown of Stratford-upon-Avon. McCarthy’s upper-level students will tour the Bank of England Museum and possibly visit the London School of Economics and Political Science.

“The learning never stops on a study abroad,” Wadia added. “It never actually stops because of the location – we’re in a different venue, a different culture. We’re always pointing out something of value, even just walking down the street. I’ll often stop the class and give a mini-lecture, a pop-up lecture. ‘Stop right there, I want you to see something on this building.’”

To ensure all interested students can take advantage of this trip – which includes a direct flight from Nashville to London – all participants will receive a $500 study abroad travel grant. The students taking world literature will receive a $500 general education core scholarship from the Center of Extended and International Education, and the College of Business is awarding students enrolled in the global business class with a $1,000 scholarship.

For more information on the APSU DEAL program visit the APSU website.

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