A Dartmouth Study Abroad on Film
Hello again, People Places Pines! I spent my junior winter quarter studying abroad in Aotearoa on the Anthropology Foreign Study Program (FSP). Because packing my whole study abroad recap into one blog post might be overwhelming, I figured I would first show you some of the beautiful imagery and pictures from my time in New Zealand; in a later blog post, I'll delve more in-depth into the program details.
Before looking into the stunning film photos—taken by my fellow FSP attendees Caroline '27, Brooke '26, and Avi '26—what you need to know about the Dartmouth Anthropology Foreign Study Program is that it is a 10 week program (the same length as all Dartmouth academic quarters) and is taught in part by a Dartmouth professor who comes to New Zealand with the cohort! The program has three courses: Pacific Archaeology, Te Ao Māori, and Colonialism and Its Legacies. The first two courses are taught by scholars at the University of Auckland (for their summer school 6-week academic term). The last of the three courses is actually taught by the Dartmouth professor throughout the 10-week academic term and supported by a Dartmouth graduate teaching assistant—shoutout to Professor Thayer (who is a Dartmouth '08 and actually went on in this program as a student!) and our TA, Jon.
The first four weeks of the program have students living in the city of Auckland at the University of Auckland (UoA) dormitories, and the latter six weeks in homestays in the surrounding suburbs. In the second portion of the program, students commute into the city while finishing their University of Auckland coursework. Then, after the UoA courses conclude, the program has two week-long built-in excursions, during which we travel as a cohort to different parts of the North Island of New Zealand.
Now, for the pictures and (semi-) brief captions for each!





















If you cannot tell from how long it has taken me to produce a blog post about my time abroad, or from how stunning the photos are, my abroad program was my favorite ten weeks ever. More to come on my FSP soon!