Unicast: Supporting Parents on the Path to University Success

Studying in the USA. A Parent Guide

51 min · 13 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Studying in the USA. A Parent Guide

Descripción

This episode unpacks the U.S. university system and how parents can guide their children through the complex application process. With over 4,000 colleges, the U.S. offers flexibility, program variety, research opportunities, and strong alumni networks. Applications are submitted via systems like the Common App, UC, or direct apps, with options such as Early Decision, Early Action, and Regular Decision. Admissions are holistic—evaluating academics, course rigor, essays, recommendations, and activities. Essays are central, requiring authenticity and reflection, while standardized testing is now often test-optional, though strong scores can still help. Costs vary widely; families must explore need-based aid, merit scholarships, and net price calculators early. Students admitted on F-1 visas may access on-campus jobs, internships (CPT), and post-graduation work (OPT). Parents should help build a balanced college list, track deadlines, and support independence without overstepping.

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17 episodios

episode University Reputation vs. Program Quality artwork

University Reputation vs. Program Quality

This episode explores whether parents should prioritize university prestige or program quality when guiding their child’s study-abroad choices. Reputation offers global name recognition, strong alumni networks, job market advantages, and world-class facilities, but not all top-ranked universities excel in every subject. Program quality, on the other hand, ensures expert faculty, hands-on opportunities, and stronger career alignment in specialized fields, though the university name may carry less global weight. The hosts stress that the “right choice” depends on career goals: reputation often matters more in global fields like finance or law, while program strength is crucial in technical or niche disciplines. Personal fit, learning style, and support services are equally important to ensure a positive university experience. The takeaway: families should balance both reputation and program quality while keeping the student’s passions, goals, and future plans at the center of the decision.

1 de jun de 202618 min
episode Understanding Global Degree Structures artwork

Understanding Global Degree Structures

This episode explores how bachelor’s degree structures vary worldwide and what that means for students studying abroad. In Europe and Australia, three-year degrees offer cost efficiency and faster entry into the workforce but are more specialized from the start. North America typically follows a four-year model, allowing broader exploration, flexibility in choosing majors, and a more holistic education. In countries like Italy, Spain, and parts of Latin America, some programs extend to five years, especially in professional fields such as law, architecture, or engineering, where accreditation is built into the degree. Each structure carries trade-offs in cost, time commitment, and career readiness. Parents are encouraged to help their children consider long-term goals, readiness for specialization, and the global recognition of degrees before deciding. Ultimately, finding the right fit depends on balancing efficiency, depth, and career aspirations.

25 de may de 202621 min
episode Getting the most from studying in Europe. Understanding the Bologa Process artwork

Getting the most from studying in Europe. Understanding the Bologa Process

This episode explains how the Bologna Process has harmonized higher education across 49 European countries, creating a unified and transferable degree system. Degrees follow a three-cycle model: Bachelor’s (3 years/180 ECTS), Master’s (1–2 years/60–120 ECTS), and Doctorate. The ECTS credit system standardizes workload (60 credits = one year), making it easier to transfer or combine studies across universities. Degrees from accredited European institutions are mutually recognized, boosting mobility, employability, and access to postgraduate study across Europe and beyond. Programs like Erasmus+ enhance cross-border opportunities, while families must still consider factors like language of instruction, accreditation, tuition, and scholarships. Overall, the Bologna system provides international students with flexibility, quality, and recognition, helping them prepare for global careers.

22 de abr de 202620 min
episode Global Application Timelines artwork

Global Application Timelines

This episode breaks down university application deadlines worldwide to help parents guide their teens through a complex process. In the U.S., students face Early Decision (binding), Early Action (non-binding), and Regular Decision deadlines between November and February, plus rolling admissions. The U.K. works through UCAS, with an October 15 deadline for Oxbridge and medicine, and January for most others. Canada uses rolling admissions, but top schools close around January–February. Australia and New Zealand follow a February academic start, with deadlines in October–December. Europe varies: Germany (July/Jan), Netherlands (Jan–May), and France (March/April via Parcoursup). Asia has diverse systems—Japan (Sept–Dec), Korea (Nov/May), China (fall deadlines). The key advice for families: create a deadline spreadsheet, start early, and plan documents, tests, and essays well ahead.

20 de abr de 202624 min