Thank you for your help and your efficiency
They say it best! Read the testimonials of students at a university in Spain.
Testimonial from Nathalie Sanchez (founder of FEEDUC)
Lost, sometimes skeptical, often distraught, they entrusted us with their lives or those of their children 4, 5, 6 or more years ago (already! how time flies...) ... at the end of their studies in Spain, we find adults, open, confident, professional.
What if we had changed their lives? Would Marie have become this excellent veterinarian? Would Mathieu have simply lived abroad? Would Manon have spoken Spanish? Would Quentin have spent a year of his life in Mexico and 6 months in Poland? Would Estelle have become a dentist? Would Adrien soon be the international architect he has always dreamed of? Would Constance be a marathon runner? Would Romain have had the opportunity to discover the end of the world? Would Margot have started her life on the arm of a handsome hidalgo?
Thank you to all the students and parents who trusted us to accompany them. Long, beautiful and surprising life to all! .... And NEVER forget that it is in the unexpected that the most beautiful surprises are hidden: Dare!
I testifyThank you for your help and your efficiency
Thank you for your testimony.
Nathalie and ClémentIt's back to school tomorrow in Madrid, and I'd like to say a big thank you to the FEEDUC team for helping me last spring and before the summer: thanks to you, I can continue my studies in dentistry at CEU San Pablo, pursuing my vocation that the French system and its unnamed reform could no longer give me.
I'm very grateful for all the advice and help you've given me. Thanks to Françoise from "Family in Madrid", I've also found a great host family. Everything is now in place for me to realize my professional project!
Once again, a big thank you to my parents, who appreciated FEE's help and the perspectives offered.
Also, don't hesitate to call on France Espagne for your project!
Thank you Pierre-Louis for your testimony!
Have a great first day of school tomorrow!
Nathalie and ClémentHello,
I want to thank you so much for your help. Every day I am getting closer to my dream of living in Spain.
The visit to the universities allowed me to visit the two universities I was interested in and to understand the requirements to be able to access them
Thank you Clement
Our 18-year-old son has wanted to study in Spain since he was 14. He's currently in terminale ES, in the European Spanish class. He speaks and understands the language very well.
So we set about making his dream come true next year, with the help of FEEDUC, who gave us excellent advice and put us in touch with universities in Madrid.
Last week, we travelled to Madrid for our son to take tests and interviews at 2 universities for a 5-year audiovisual/journalism course. All went well, as he was accepted into both.
What's more, we were made very welcome, and the people there really took the time to introduce us to the establishments and the way university life works.
But while everything seemed perfect, my son had a doubt: was he really ready to study for such a long time, at 18 and for the first time, in a foreign country?
This question arose following an interview he had with one of the university directors, who spoke to him frankly and drew his attention to this point, asking him if he had taken into account all the obligations and administrative procedures he would have to deal with on site, as well as the day-to-day management of things (apartment, laundry, meals, papers...).
We'd already told him all this, but at that moment he realized the reality of the studies he'd been fantasizing about.
As a result, he's still thinking about it, but he may postpone his project, perhaps in another form.
We weren't expecting that. We hope he'll leave in the end, because it's a great project, but he's being lucid, and that's good too.
This experience reflects a reality that we sometimes forget: going abroad to study, even when you have a fairly good command of the language, is not an easy decision to make. It requires maturity and a certain amount of distance, which can be tricky when you're just 18...
Very well organized open house. Thanks to Nathalie and Clément for their presence during these open houses, always available to answer our questions.
A visit of the universities is essential to realize the means available for the students.
It is with great pleasure that I leave this testimonial about our experience of FEEDUC's support for our daughter and her plans to study physiotherapy in Spain. Nathalie and Clément were friendly, patient and invaluable in our overall approach. Firstly, in the preliminary study of the diversity of the dossiers to be compiled, then in the organization of the "Open Doors" week, then by being present on site during the visits to the various universities that we had previously selected with our daughter, and finally in the organization of the various registration processes and other preliminary tests and interviews. We were able to meet teachers, students and other parents who, like us, were concerned about their children's future, and this gave us a precise idea of the quality of education in Spain, the high-level infrastructure, and the future secure living environment for our daughter. At the end of this "Open Doors" week, we feel that we are giving our daughter the chance to continue her studies in Spain under excellent conditions. We would like to thank Nathalie and Clément for their availability and the speed of their response (even on a Sunday). They helped us make up our own minds about the best choice to make between the different universities, without ever stepping out of their role as impartial intermediaries and facilitators, guaranteeing professional guidance.
In order to decide where I would like to study, I did some research on the internet, I went to specialized study abroad fairs in Paris, I also contacted France Espagne éducation and I visited two universities in Madrid on their advice. After these two visits, I chose the CEU San Pablo University which seemed more attractive and more adapted to my course in architecture. The meeting with Nathalie Sanchez from France Spain was decisive in the choice of my studies in Madrid.
I decided to study in Spain because it is a country that has always attracted me by its culture and art of living.
I also wanted to learn a new language during my studies, in addition to English and French.
This choice became a reality when I learned that the University of San Pablo Ceu offered an international curriculum (courses taught in English) and a European diploma coupled with an equivalence to the American diploma at the end of the architecture curriculum.
More specifically, the architecture curriculum in Spain is based on both architecture and engineering, which is very present.
Moreover, the infrastructure and facilities at the university where I study seemed to be of very good quality and suitable for a concrete and precise learning of the course I was engaged in.