BS/MS Mechanical Engineering - Anticipated 2018

Global Seminar 鈥淟eading and Managing across Cultures in Northern Europe鈥

Levi Pearson during his global seminar.

CU student Levi Pearson (front row, left) gathers with peers during a global seminar in the Netherlands.

When Levi Pearson stepped off a plane alone for a month-long global seminar in the Netherlands, the commotion of people shouting in several foreign languages was jarring. But he successfully negotiated customs, trains and taxis to arrive at his home base in Maastricht.

Just getting there was a process that generated greater understanding for the engineering student.

鈥淲hen you鈥檙e on a multicultural team, it makes you more empathetic when someone struggles to communicate,鈥 he says.

Pearson and his peers traveled overseas as part of a baby直播app-led global seminar called 鈥淟eading and Managing across Cultures in Northern Europe,鈥 offered through the Leeds School of Business. During his term, Pearson earned course credit and traveled to cities in Germany, Luxembourg and Belgium. The course, which focused on cross-cultural business management, was a nice break from the technical rigors of engineering, he says.

While abroad, Pearson toured large multinational companies like UPS and even sat in on a European Union council meeting.

鈥淲e got to see how a culturally diverse continent functions when they鈥檙e so densely packed together, and that really opened up a lot for me, engineering-wise, to see how different cultures think,鈥 Pearson says.

The experience continued to benefit Pearson after he returned to the United States. After he scored an internship the following summer with Medtronic, the global medical device company, he asked the hiring team why his application stood out.

鈥淭hey pulled out my resume, and they showed me what they had highlighted,鈥 Pearson says 鈥 his international experience. 鈥淚t really set me apart.鈥