Spring Break / Easter Break

PC is proud to sponsor the following Spring Break faculty-led abroad programs in 2026.

PC in England: C.S. Lewis’s Oxford

Course Information

Course Title: HUM275/C.S. Lewis’s Oxford (1 credit)

Course Description: This course is designed to introduce students to some of the writings of C. S. Lewis in the context in which he spent most of his adult life: Oxford, England. The course will involve a combination of seminars discussing Lewis’s works and cultural excursions to sites either significant for his personal life or important for the cultural context of Oxford during his time there.This program is open to all Providence College students, but it will be particularly attractive (and useful) to students who have taken or who will be concurrently enrolled in DWC 202: The Life and Writings of C. S. Lewis or THL/HUM 348: C. S. Lewis, Christian Thinker.The main objective of the program is to give students a taste of the context in which Lewis lived, wrote, and taught in order to gain a better appreciation of the social, material, and historical factors that contributed to his thought.

Faculty Leader(s): Fr. Isaac Morales, O.P. (imorale1@providence.edu) and Dr. William Hogan (whogan@providence.edu)

Travel Dates: March 6, 2026 through March 14, 2026 (Group departs on March 6 and arrives in the UK on March 7.)

Application and Deadlines

Application Deadline: November 7, 2025

Deposit Amount and Deadline: $500 due December 5, 2025

Total Program Fee: $2,600

Balance ($2100) Due: January 30, 2026

Link to application

PC in Mexico: Global Border Crossing

Course Information

Course Title: Global Border Crossing (4 credits) – open to all majors

Course Description: The Global Border Crossing course is centered around the meaning of “justice across borders,” and “global border crossing”, with a specific focus on the historical and contemporary relationship between the U.S. and México. We will deepen this understanding through a comparative perspective, examining other borders and communities, both globally and locally, while also exploring what it means to live in transnational communities. Students will also take an active look at their own roles in building connections for social change across borders, while also critically examining the meaning of “global citizenship” and how their own identities and social locations impact working for that change. With a service-learning trip to Tijuana, México acting as a central “text” of the course, participants will come to understand the unique culture and circumstances that arise out of the U.S./México border region

Prior to the service-learning and immersion trip, through weekly classes participants will learn about the history, culture, socio-economic, and geo-political aspects of the U.S./México border. With themes such as the creation and maintenance of global inequality, national security enforcement measures, and transnational families, students will develop a broadened perspective of the historical and contemporary realities of life on/around the U.S./México border.

During break, our group will embark on a service-learning trip to Tijuana, where we will be working with Esperanza International, a local community development organization. Our group will be arriving to and departing from San Diego, CA, which will allow us to explore some of our course’s themes on the U.S. side of the border, while also requiring us to physically cross the U.S./México border, to literally experience border crossing. We will then join the community of Esperanza International, and their Tijuana-based sister organization (Fundación Esperanza de México), where we will spend the duration of the program. Supported by international volunteer groups, Esperanza works with local community members and volunteers to build new homes and empower communities. Our students will be working with homeowners to build/rebuild their homes, while simultaneously learning about the complex facets of transnational communities. Our group will be staying in Esperanza’s Posada housing quarters, where we will be living simply and in community with each other for the week. Through this experience, our students will be practicing respect, understanding, and building relationships across borders.

Faculty/staff Leader(s): Dr. Kara Cebulko (kcebulko@providence.edu) and Ms. Maddie Harris (mharri21@providence.edu)

Travel Dates: March 27, 2026 to April 4, 2026

Application and Deadlines

Application Deadline: November 23, 2025

Deposit Amount and Deadline: $100 due on December 19, 2025

Total Program Fee: TBD

Finale Balance Due: TBD

Link to application

Center for Global Education


Office Hours: Open Mondays-Fridays, 8:30am-4:30pm
Feinstein 410
401.865.2114
401.865.2455
pcabroad@providence.edu