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AFS Research

Assessment of the Impact of the AFS Study Abroad Experience

Recently, Dr. Mitchell Hammer of Hammer Consulting and American University completed a three-year, independent study of the AFS program. According to Dr. Hammer, these findings confirm that international student exchange at the high school level plays a critical role in building bridges across cultural differences. Students return home with improved abilities to navigate across cultural boundaries.

The study findings show that the AFS programs help young people:

  • Become more competent in crossing cultures.
  • Feel more comfortable with people from other cultures.
  • Build more friendships with people from other cultures.
  • Become fluent in the foreign language.
  • Know more in general about the host culture.

The work completed will help AFS understand the needs of our current students and their families and to find ways to enhance our orientation materials, selection, guidelines and placement recommendations.

We discovered the importance of the timing of orientations, and we now focus our primary efforts on orientations that take place a short while after the participant arrives in the host country, since at this stage, they have the context they need to understand the concepts of intercultural learning.

Intercultural Research Community

Join the network! If you would like to receive occasional mailings and reports on AFS research, add your name and email to our database here Selected Research by AFS.

Click on the following documents to read the findings of AFS’s intercultural research studies.

Why AFS?

More immersion into more cultures.
Experience with international exchange since 1919.
More than 30,000 active volunteers in over 50 countries.
Program support and risk management.
More than 325,000 program alumni.

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