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Study Abroad

Interlocking OU, Dodge Family College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Classics and Letters, The University of Oklahoma website wordmark.

There are many study abroad opportunities for students of the classics. Listed below are three of the more popular programs. Meet with an advisor or a professor about participating.

Intercollegiate Center for Studies in Rome (ICCS)

Better known as "the Centro," the ICCS provides undergraduate students with an opportunity to study ancient history and archaeology, Greek and Latin literature, and ancient art while living in Rome. Frequent site visits and explorations, museum tours and lectures, and wider-ranging trips outside Rome are included as part of the course. Applicants must be currently registered undergraduates majoring either in classics, classical history, or archaeology, or must be art history majors with strong classical interests and background. All applicants should have at least a B average, and a background in Roman history is strongly advised. This program is administered by Duke University.

  • Fall semester (early September-mid December): March 7
  • Spring semester (late January-end May): October 7
  • Email: abroad@aas.duke.edu
  • Tel: (919) 684-2174
  • Fax: (919) 684-3083
  • Mail: Office of Study Abroad
    Duke University
    2016 Campus Drive, Box 90057
    Durham, NC 27708-0057

College Year in Athens

This program offers a range of classes that together provide a well-rounded picture of Greece and the Eastern Mediterranean. Classes are taught in English, and previous knowledge of Modern Greek is not a prerequisite. Whenever relevant, classes are taught at sites and in museums, and an extensive study-travel program introduces students to the major monuments of the country. The summer programs include courses on art and mythology and an intense three-week immersion course in the Modern Greek language. CYA is designed to make the culture and history of Greece and its neighbors accessible to all, but students majoring in classics and those interested in archaeology and Greek culture and history will find the program to be particularly rewarding.

  • Fall semester (September-December): May 1 (for fall semester or full year)
  • Spring semester (January-May): October 15
  • Summer courses (two sessions, May-July): April 1
  • Email: info@cyathens.org
  • Tel: (617) 868-8200
  • Fax: (617) 868-8207
  • Mail: P.O. 390890, Cambridge, MA 02139

The American School of Classical Studies at Athens

The two six-week sessions are designed for those with an interest in the classical world who wish to become acquainted with Greece and its antiquities in a limited time, and to improve their understanding of the relationship between the country (its monuments, landscape, and climate) and its history, literature, and culture. Each session is divided between the study of sites, monuments, and museums in Attica and visits to locations in North and Central Greece, the Peloponnese, and Crete, according to itineraries set by each director. Participants are required to deliver oral reports on assigned topics, usually presented at the different sites appropriate to the reports. The summer sessions, comprising 20 students each, are open to graduate and advanced undergraduate students.

Summer sessions (June-July or August):
January 15

Application kits and scholarship information are available from the ASCSA website or from the U.S. Office at:

Committee on the Summer Sessions
American School of Classical Studies at Athens
6-8 Charlton Street
Princeton, NJ 08540-5232