<p>My college list is only consists of American schools, but because I want to be a polyglot and be a translator or international relation person of some sort, I have been thinking that living in europe is a great option. I have no idea what schools in Europe have classes taught in English but have an environment where people do not speak English. I was thinking Germany or Spain, I love the city..... I understand that my AP scores will then be useless...ugh..i have no idea what to do. I was looking up Franklin college, but although it's in Switzerland and is accredited in America and Switzerland, it does not offer majors and minors in languages other than French and German....maybe UC santa Barbara, San Francisco State, Boston University, George Washington University, Northeastern, Univ of Pittsburgh, UCLA, and Berkeley are my best bet....any opinions?</p>
<p>CA-female-senior-undergraduate</p>
<p>SAT:1800
GPA:3.9 weighted
passed AP English with a 4 (only one I passed out of three)</p>
<p>the university of st. andrews in scotland is really good in international relations and is known for it’s int. relations program so you should definitely look into that.<br>
The richmond international university in london is good too- from Boston. </p>
<p>i’m majoring in international relations too and i think you should definitely look into the university of san francisco, american university, syracuse university, university of washington, and university of washington- your stats match their perfectly !!</p>
<p>do you mean ucsf? American University is religiously affiliated so that won’t work, where is syracuse? Does it have a metro? wow–syracuse looks great thanks so much for your input…I am applying in a month…any more suggestions?</p>
<p>no… univ. of san francisco. it’s great in intl. relations and it’s a private university! syracuse is in syracuse, new york. but beware the winters are really snowy!</p>
<p>There are no “good” English-language universities in non-English speaking countries. Your best bet is to attend a good university in the US and study one year abroad as an exchange student. Also, AU’s affiliation to the Methodist church is dormant. One can easily go there and never notice the affiliation.</p>
<p>And University of San Francisco is Catholic-church affiliated, a Jesuit school, albeit a fairly liberal one.</p>