Study Abroad

Program Options

Global E3 (Global Engineering Educational Exchange)    

Global E3 is a one-of-a-kind educational exchange program designed specifically for engineering students. Students may choose from 28 prestigious colleges and universities in 19 countries, across Europe, Asia, and Latin America. A significant number of courses are offered in English, and a number of programs are available for students who are proficient in Spanish, German, French, Japanese, Korean, and Chinese languages. For detailed profiles of participating institutions please refer to the Global E3 website.

NYU Study Abroad

International education is a long-standing part of New York University’s global mission which includes a wide range of initiatives both in the United States and abroad to facilitate the exchange of knowledge across international boundaries. NYU’s study abroad tradition began in 1958 when NYU in Madrid opened its doors to American students. Since then NYU’s offerings of international opportunities has expanded rapidly and includes fully staffed academic centers in eight countries, exchange partnerships with some of the world’s most prestigious universities in 18 countries, short term summer programs in 17 countries, and specialized learning programs like film directing and nursing.

NYU operates programs during the academic year in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates; Accra, Ghana; Berlin, Germany; Buenos Aires, Argentina; Florence, Italy; London, England; Madrid, Spain; Prague, the Czech Republic; Shanghai, China; Paris, France; and Tel Aviv, Israel.

Students interested in studying at one of NYU's ten international campuses will work closely with their adviser to create an academic plan that will facilitate this exciting opportunity.  NYU-Poly students will apply as Visiting Students (the recommendation letter requirement is waived for NYU-Poly students) and courses taken while abroad will be posted on the student's transcripts and their grades will be included in their NYU-Poly GPA calculation.

Interested? Learn more!

Questions? Just ask!