Honors Abroad
Please note the updated program dates of July 23-30, 2025
Frog Camp Registration Details
- Login to my.tcu.edu and pay your non-refundable commitment deposit to attend TCU.
- Accept your invitation to the John V. Roach Honors College, also at my.tcu.edu*
- Beginning March 25 at 5:30pm CST, registration for Orientation and Frog Camp will open.
- You must first register for an orientation session in order to register for Frog Camp.
- Honors Frog Camp space is limited to students who have accepted their invitation to the John V. Roach Honors College and requires a non-refundable $500 Frog Camp deposit.
*While you have until May 1 to accept your invitation, spots will likely fill before this time.
- The remaining program balance of $3000 is due by June 23rd.
- Details on paying the balance provided at a later date.
- Registered students will receive further communication about Frog Camp through their TCU email account; please ensure you enable this account and check it frequently.
- If you register for Honors Frog Camp, the last day to cancel is June 23rd.
- Cancellations received after this date will still be charged the $3000 program balance. Cancellations can be done in the my.tcu.edu portal where you registered for Honors Frog Camp.
If you have questions about registering for Honors Frog Camp, email frogcamp@tcu.edu.
Read about Summer 2024 Games and Culture in Japan - Here
Cultural Routes: Berlin - Spring Break 2025
March 14-22, 2025
- Apply HERE
- Application Closes October 14, 2024 at 11:59 p.m.
- Application is open to current first-year Honors students.
- Selected students will be responsible for a $500 student fee, passport, incidentals, and lunch during the experience.
- THIS EXPERIENCE IS NOT FOR COURSE CREDIT.
Cultural Routes: Berlin will explore the critical cultural, political, and historical pivots that gave rise to our current understanding of Berlin and geopolitical conflicts around Nazism and communism. More specifically, students will energetically explore Berlin to understand how this unique urban center—one of Europe’s largest cities—works through historical layers (as well as walls) and continues to be shaped by religious, political, philanthropic, and cultural movements. Students will spend time traveling throughout the city and look for opportunities to interact with locals. They will visit historic sites including the Berlin Wall, Potsdam, Sachsenhausen, and memorials in and around Berlin. Employing a traveling classroom that privileges experiential learning, this spring-break study will challenge students to extend their understanding of themselves and their capabilities to a more global perspective, one where they regard themselves as part of a larger global narrative, see common threads linking the past to the present, and begin to imagine ways in which they can help change the world.
Students participating in this spring break experience should expect to walk many miles a day, have early morning starts, and participate in night adventures designed around learning and team building.