... it is a year of living independently, adapting and growing in a very different cultural and linguistic environment.
When students imagine a year abroad, they often focus on the exciting parts: new places, new people, new opportunities, and the chance to finally use their Russian in real life.
But the reality is more demanding than that.
It involves handling everyday situations, making decisions under pressure, responding to things you do not fully understand, and trying to keep your confidence steady while everything around you feels unfamiliar.
For many students, this takes much more out of them than they expect.
That is not because they are weak, lazy, or bad at Russian. It is because academic study and real life abroad are not the same thing. A student can do well in class and still feel disoriented, hesitant, or overwhelmed when Russian becomes part of everyday life.
Students in that position often retreat into English-speaking bubbles. When this happens, progress becomes slower, confidence often drops, and the year abroad can become smaller, narrower, and less rewarding than it could have been.
They then wonder at the end of their year abroad as to why they hadn't improved as much as they'd hoped...