ExamRift Blog

Study Abroad Planning

Study Abroad Planning articles: test prep tips, strategies, English practice, and student guides.

2026-05-10 - 13 min read - Study Abroad Planning

Is the Atlanta BeltLine Worth Planning a Day Around?

The Atlanta BeltLine is one of the most distinctive things to do in the city — a former railroad corridor reborn as a continuous walking, biking, and public-art trail that knits together neighborhoods, food halls, breweries, and parks. The Eastside Trail is the most-walked segment and ties Inman Park, Old Fourth Ward, and Midtown to two of Atlanta's best food halls. This guide walks the BeltLine as a full day for first-time visitors and prospective students, with recommended start points, food stops, side detours into Piedmont Park and the Krog Street Tunnel, and what to skip if you only have half a day.

2026-05-04 - 12 min read - Study Abroad Planning

How to Manage Your Money as an International Student

A practical guide to financial management for international students, covering banking, budgeting, currency exchange, part-time work, scholarships, and hidden costs.

2026-05-04 - 9 min read - Study Abroad Planning

What Should First-Time Visitors See in San Francisco?

First-time visitors to San Francisco have a small set of canonical sights — the Golden Gate Bridge, Alcatraz, Chinatown, North Beach, the Ferry Building, the cable cars — that are genuinely worth the time and a slightly larger set that is overrated. This guide walks the canonical list in a logical two-day visit order, with practical routing, food stops, and notes on what to skip.

2026-05-03 - 10 min read - Study Abroad Planning

Why Did Einstein End Up in Princeton?

Albert Einstein spent the last 22 years of his life walking to work at the Institute for Advanced Study, an unusual research institution founded in 1930 a mile and a half from the Princeton University campus. The IAS is its own world — no students, no teaching, no classes — and the reason Einstein, Gödel, von Neumann, and Oppenheimer all gathered there explains a great deal about how Princeton became one of the world's research towns.

2026-05-03 - 9 min read - Study Abroad Planning

What Happened at the Battle of Princeton?

On January 3, 1777, George Washington's exhausted Continental Army surprised a British force outside Princeton, won a short morning battle on open farmland, and saved the American Revolution from collapse. The battlefield is now a state park one mile from the university campus, and the story it preserves is the most consequential ten days of the war. Here's what happened, why it mattered, and how to visit the site today.

2026-05-03 - 8 min read - Study Abroad Planning

How Do You Spend an Afternoon Around Nassau Street?

Nassau Street and Palmer Square are the small commercial center of Princeton — bookstores, cafés, the Nassau Inn, and the Princeton University Store all packed into a few walkable blocks across from the FitzRandolph Gate. This guide maps the bookstores, the coffee shops, the lunch spots, and the way to spend an unhurried afternoon in town between morning and evening campus visits.

2026-05-03 - 9 min read - Study Abroad Planning

Can High School Students Experience Princeton Before Applying?

Princeton runs a small number of summer programs for high school students — most notably the Princeton Summer Journalism Program for low-income students and the Laurence Rockefeller Fellowship-style research and humanities programs that operate quietly each year. None are admission shortcuts. This guide walks through what's actually available, what attendance signals to admissions, and how to think about a pre-college summer in Princeton.

2026-05-02 - 14 min read - Study Abroad Planning

What Was Black Wall Street in Durham? Hayti, Parrish Street, and NC Mutual

Between 1898 and the 1960s, Durham's Parrish Street and the adjacent Hayti neighborhood housed one of the most concentrated Black-owned business districts in the United States — anchored by North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company (founded 1898), the largest Black-owned business in the country for most of the 20th century. The 1960s Durham Freeway construction destroyed most of Hayti. This guide traces what Durham's 'Black Wall Street' actually was, how it was built and unbuilt, and what remains today.

2026-04-27 - 23 min read - Study Abroad Planning

The Cathedral of Learning and the Nationality Rooms: Pitt's 535-Foot Gothic Classroom Tower

Pitt's Cathedral of Learning is the second-tallest educational building in the world, 535 feet of Gothic Revival limestone holding 31 Nationality Rooms — each donated by a Pittsburgh ethnic community as a functional, decorated classroom. This guide walks the building's history, the Commons Room, four Nationality Rooms in detail, and the academic vocabulary the visit teaches.

2026-04-21 - 22 min read - Study Abroad Planning

Great Migration and Bronzeville: Black Chicago from 1916 to Today

Between 1916 and 1970, more than 500,000 African Americans moved from the rural South to Chicago, building on the South Side one of the most consequential Black cultural centers in American history. This guide walks Bronzeville, the DuSable Museum, and the neighborhood institutions that shaped Black Chicago — from Ida B. Wells to Barack Obama.

2026-04-21 - 22 min read - Study Abroad Planning

Hull House, Jane Addams, and the American Settlement Movement: Chicago's Progressive Era Legacy

In 1889, Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr opened Hull House at 800 S Halsted Street in a Chicago immigrant neighborhood. It became the flagship of the American settlement movement, launched modern social work, and won Addams the 1931 Nobel Peace Prize. This guide walks the surviving Hull-House Museum on the UIC campus, traces Addams's biography and the broader Progressive Era, and unpacks the vocabulary that US history and TOEFL Reading passages use to describe this era.

2026-04-19 - 10 min read - Study Abroad Planning

Boston's Freedom Trail: 16 Historical Sites That Power TOEFL Reading

The 2.5-mile Freedom Trail walks visitors through the origins of the American Revolution — and through exactly the kind of colonial, political, and social history that fills TOEFL Reading passages. A site-by-site guide.

2026-03-29 - 13 min read - Study Abroad Planning

How Should I Practice English Before Going Abroad?

Most students focus on vocabulary and grammar before departure. But the skills that matter most abroad — understanding fast speech, thinking on your feet — need a different kind of practice.

2026-03-27 - 12 min read - Study Abroad Planning

Is a Short-Term Language Program Abroad Worth the Money?

Some students come back fluent. Others come back with great photos and the same English level. We analyze what makes short-term language programs succeed or fail — including hidden costs nobody mentions.

2026-03-24 - 11 min read - Study Abroad Planning

How Good Does My English Need to Be Before Studying Abroad?

A TOEFL score that gets you admitted is not the same as being ready to thrive abroad. We break down what each CEFR level actually means in practice — from surviving lectures to making friends.