<p>Montegut, has your son considered other countries in Continental Europe? I know Germany would have some engineering programs and the LHC is in France and Switzerland, so those countries might have something also. There should be a good assortment of engineering programs taught in English throughout Europe, but definitely in Germany, Scandinavia, and the Netherlands.</p>
<p>^^^What is the LHC?</p>
<p>Thanks for the suggestion, Seatide. We’ll look at what programs are offered at the countries you mentioned.</p>
<p>The LHC is the Large Hadron Collider: the world’s largest and highest-energy particle accelerator.</p>
<p>If he wants to some over here to the UK and study Engineering, he should try and get into a program at Imperial College. It has a world-class Engineeting program and is located in a very interesting and safe part of London, South Kensington. Londondad</p>
<p>^^Thanks, Londondad, I’ll look into that one.</p>
<p>@ ril5384. You’re studying at AUP! Is it a difficult school to get into? Would you mind sharing a bit? For example,
-Years studying French
-ECs</p>
<p>Also, how is it’s FA, if you know?</p>
<p>Trying to name just one best place to study abroad seems a bit silly. Everyone has different tastes and different needs. Some people want to go to the US, or the UK. Some people want to learn French or Italian (a place I wouldn’t mind going). For myself, I teach on a program called Global 30 at Tsukuba University in Japan. We have about 2000 international students here, many studying abroad for a term or a year (although G30 allows students to do whole degrees here, in Japan, taught in English). Many of our students want to come back.<br>
But here’s the thing. Japan is for them. It may not be for you, and that’s just fine. </p>
<p>I don’t think there is one best place for everyone, although there may well be a one best place for you. I’ve found mine.</p>