Andrews gives you a backdrop of beauty for each season of the year. But our 1,600‐acre campus provides much more than beauty. From music to athletics, academics to spiritual nourishment, you can find it all here.
Two Andrews students decide to try the "local look" during the Department of Religion & Biblical Languages study tour to Lebanon. (Photo Credit: Glenn Russell).
The Department of Religion & Biblical Languages study tour to Egypt, Jordan, Israel, Turkey and Greece, directed by Ante Jeroncic and Ruben Munoz, included a visit to the Great Pyramid in Giza. (Photo credit: Ante Jeroncic)
A stop at the Istanbul Archeological Museum in Turkey during a study tour with the Department of Religion & Biblical Languages. (Photo credit: Ante Jeroncic)
The Karnak Temple in Luxor, Egypt, was one of the many sites visited on the Department of Religion & Biblical Languages study tour. (Photo credit: Ante Jeroncic)
An Andrews student poses for a photo atop Mt. Sinai during the Department of Religion & Biblical Languages study tour. (Photo contributed by Ante Jeroncic)
Students on the Department of International Language Studies study tour to Europe made a stop at Mont Blanc. Meaning "White Mountain" in Italian, Mont Blanc is the highest mountain in the Alps. (Photo credit: Sonia Badenas)
Students pose in front of Itaipu Binacional Dam, the worldâs largest dam located on the border between Brazil and Paraguay, during the Department of International Language Studies study tour. (Photo credit: Ruben Perez-Schulz)
Machu Picchu, a Peruvian historical site, was visited by students who took in the ancient Inca traditions during a study tour with the Department of International Language Studies. (Photo credit: Ruben Perez-Schulz)
Each summer approximately 20 study tour groups travel to discover the world. Shown here are several members of the Department of International Language Studies group at the Christ Redeemer statue in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (Photo credit: Ruben Perez-Schulz)
International Language Studies students pose on Tres Fronteras (Three Frontiers), with two different countries, Argentina & Paraguay, shown in the background. (Photo credit: Ruben Perez-Schulz)