Central freshman prepping for year in Germany – AberdeenNews.com

Sadie Bengs is really excited to move back to Germany, but her family members are a little jealous they don’t get to go.

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The Central High School freshman is preparing for a 10-month stay in Deutschland as part of the Congress-Bundestag Youth Exchange, a partnership between the German and U.S. governments.

“It was really fun when I was there before because I got to try different foods, meet new people. I got to see a lot of things I would never have been able to see here,” Sadie, 14, said. “I got to go all over Europe.”

Bengs and her family lived in Germany for three years, when she was in fourth, fifth and sixth grades. Her father, Brian Bengs, taught at the NATO School in Oberammergau. He’s now a criminal justice professor at Northern State University.

“I’ve always been looking for a way to go back there, and then my dad found this and I was very excited,” Sadie said.

She found out about the Congress-Bundestag Youth Exchange when her dad took the application materials home.

High school students who are 15 to 18 live with host families throughout Germany and attend German high school. Most of the cost of the trip is covered by the program, but families need to get their students to an international airport and cover the cost of a passport and a student visa, as well as any spending money, according to information on the program’s website.

Central High School is working with Sadie to make sure her credits in Germany transfer, she said. Anything that doesn’t get covered can be made up with an online class her junior or senior year.

There aren’t too many high school experiences that are specific to sophomore year, but Sadie said she’ll miss a few things about American high school — mostly sports and dances.

She doesn’t know where in Germany she’ll be living yet. It all depends on the host family.

“When I first go over there, there will be a four-week language camp, so you’re not just completely thrown in,” Sadie said, adding that she knows some German from her first stay in the country.

Her little sister, Immy, a sixth-grader, is more likely to miss Germany than her big sister, Sadie said.

“I think she’s jealous because she lived in Germany too,” Sadie said. “She’s happy for me.”

Even if they wanted to, the rest of the Bengses aren’t allowed to visit during Sadie’s stay, she said.

The biggest thing she’s missed being away from Germany is the food, Sadie said.

“There (were) bakeries with pretzels and everything, and you go up and get them for $1. It was great,” she said.

She takes off in early August, and from Washington, D.C. She’ll get back about June 2019.

Being the new kid is something Sadie is used to. Before living in Germany, her family was in Las Vegas. After Germany, she was in Louisiana for a year before moving to South Dakota in eighth grade.

“That’s a normal thing for me,” she said.

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