High school exchange programme in Italy
Immerse yourself in the Italian culture, language and lifestyle, living with a host family and studying at a local secondary school.














Experience the authentic dolce vita in Italy
Student exchange programme in Italy
Italian people are truly one of a kind – warm, chatty, animated, always ready to discuss a topic in front of an espresso, and keen to meet new people. Thanks to their natural gift of conviviality, they make their country an ideal destination for exchange students looking for a lively, authentic experience. As someone once said, “Love and understand the Italians, for the people are more marvelous than the land”.
In addition to a warm welcome, Italy has a lot in store for you – incredible history, a rich cultural and artistic patrimony, and of course, don't forget the food... are you ready to experience the dolce vita and learn to speak with your hands? Throw yourself in the most genuine Italian experience!

Living the Italian way
Food: the real deal
In Italy, every day will be an opportunity to taste your favourite dishes and discover new, typical specialties: not only pasta and pizza, but authentic gelato, gnocchi, arancini, tiramisu... Y-U-M.
What’s high school like in Italy?
Content-focused
You will soon discover that in Italy, school is largely content-focused, with teachers being afforded a great deal of respect and classes often delivered in a lecture style. Students take notes, ask questions and later review and memorise the content.
Shorter days
A typical school day starts around 8:00-8:30 am and finishes around 1:30 pm, allowing Italian students to eat lunch at home every day and spend afternoons doing homework, sports and activities. However, school attendance is generally Monday to Saturday.
A different system
Students remain in the same classroom all day, while teachers rotate between the rooms. Your classmates will soon feel like family, as you’ll spend every day with them and share every class together!
New friendships
Family plays a big role in Italy, but so does friendship. A true friendship is for life – you will quickly discover how nice it is to have Italian friends to share your days with.
A small country of great beauty – let it surprise you with an exchange experience!
Choose authenticity – trust WEP and prepare to be amazed.
On a Classic programme, you will experience the most authentic side of Italy. You may be placed anywhere in the country, depending on the location of the host family who has chosen you to share this incredible adventure with.
Volunteer host family
Public school
Placement anywhere in Italy
2, 3, 5 or 10-month programmes available
Your host family during your year abroad
Gain a second family – they can’t wait to welcome you into their lives!
Here is why:
Italian families tend to be warm and welcoming, and usually very keen to share about their life, traditions and culinary habits with their exchange students, making them feel right at home! Ready for lots of homemade meals?
Italian families are often large, as besides the parents and children, they include grandparents, uncles, aunties and cousins (sometimes even living under the same roof)! Prepare for frequent and joyful extended family reunions, and your very own Italian mamma, nonno or cousin.
Your host family will be at your side during your Italian adventure. Whether it’s to help you with homework, guide you in your choice of activities, or give you a hug if you’re feeling homesick, they are there to help you integrate. Don’t hesitate to lean on them!



Your school in Italy
Find out more about your Italian school experience
Education in Italy begins at 5 or 6 years old with scuola primaria (primary school), for five years. After that, students go to scuola media (middle school) for three years and conclude with five years of scuola superiore (secondary school), for a total of 13 years of schooling. Education is compulsory until the end of the second year of secondary school.
The Italian education system
Secondary schools in Italy are divided into different types. Italian students approaching the end of middle school can choose if they wish to continue their studies at a liceo (comprising of different streams, such as humanities and classical studies, sciences, arts, foreign languages...), a technical school (often offering business or technology streams), or again a vocational school (more hands-on and aimed at learning a specific trade).
Once a school and a ‘stream’ has been chosen, subjects are more or less compulsory. All schools teach core subjects such as mathematics, Italian, PE, history and one foreign language.
Subjects in Italy
Secondary education in Italy consists of five years, organised as follows:
- Prima superiore – 1st year of high school (students aged 14-15)
- Seconda superiore – 2nd year (students aged 15-16)
- Terza superiore – 3rd year (students aged 16-17)
- Quarta superiore - 4th year (students aged 17-18)
- Quinta superiora - 5th year (students aged 18-19)
Students graduate high school by sitting a state exam called Maturità, which includes a series of written tests, plus an oral exam in front of a panel of teachers.
Italian high school
Italian schools don’t offer many extra-curricular activities. If you wish to play a sport or get involved in a recreational activity, ask your host family or area representative to help you look for opportunities available locally – clubs, sports centre, youth groups or associations, etc.
School in Italy is quite demanding; to extend your networks and make friends outside of school, get involved in the community and try new activities and past-times.
Extra-curricular activities
The academic year in Italy starts in mid-September and ends in early to mid-June, with a long break in the summer. You will also enjoy a few breaks and holiday periods during the year, including:
- New Year's Day: 1st January, to spend with family and friends.
- Epiphany: 6th January, with interesting traditions including a witch flying on a broomstick and bringing children lollies or coal...
- Good Friday and Easter Monday: usually in April, get ready for chocolate eggs.
- Liberation Day 25 April, to commemorate the victory of the Italian resistance movement and the liberation from German occupation at the end of World War II.
- Labour Day: 1st May, all workers rest for a day.
- Republic Day: 2nd June, a patriotic day to celebrate the country.
- Ferragosto: 15th August, a popular time to take a summer vacation. This day is also a religious holiday, marking the Assumption of the Virgin Mary.
- Ognissanti: 1st November, a common Christian holiday to honour all Saints and remember the deceased.
- Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary: 8th December, another religious holiday observed in many countries.
- Christmas Day 25th December, with a big family meal and traditional panettone for dessert.
- Saint Stephen's Day: 26th December, a day to rest after so many celebrations and food.
The school calendar
Academic grading in Italy is usually based on a numerical scale from 1 to 10. Students sit several written and oral tests during the year, and are required to have an average of 6 to pass.
Grades in Italy
Stories from students and parents who have been there
Here are the testimonials of families who have chosen WEP for their exchange experience.
High School Exchange WELCOME CAMP
Three unforgettable days in Rome or Milan
Kick off your exchange program in Italy with a 3-night Welcome Camp in one of Italy's most popular destinations, Rome or Milan! During this optional arrival camp, students will get to participate in cultural workshops, sightsee the city and get take part in fun activities with exchange students from all over the globe!
"I made lots of friends from around the world. We walked around Rome and saw everything (Colosseum, Trevi Fountain...). My new friends and I got matching bracelets and gelato!" - Olivia, January 2023
Going with WEP is best
Since 1988, a wide choice of destinations and comprehensive assistance before, during and after your overseas programme. WEP is the ideal partner for your big overseas adventure.
Like you, we also get to choose who we travel with: our schools, host families and overseas partner organisations are carefully selected.
We offer a custom-made insurance policy, specifically designed for our participants, and we have a solid network behind us.
Emergency assistance, overseas and in the UK, is available 7 days out of 7, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
Allowing all our participants to live their desired overseas experience is a mission, a challenge we're thrilled to accept.
FAQ
Your host family, local coordinator and your host organisation will provide you with support while you are overseas. WEP will remain in contact with the host organisation and your parents to coordinate and support your experience. In case of an emergency, both you and your family will be able to call an emergency phone number that is answered 24/7.
No. Even if you go on exchange to an English speaking destination, you will not be able to transfer work across to the UK school system. Students should expect to return home to the UK and start a new year of school having taken a gap year. Most applicants participate in a year program with WEP and return to school with the year below on their return. If you participate in a shorter program, your school might be willing to allow you to catch up with missed work so that you can continue in your same school year. All these decisions are made by your school so it is important that you talk with them before applying for the program.
Our partners have different rules regarding your language proficiency - some ask that you have between 1 and 2 years of experience with their language, while others (such as Brazil, Argentina, Denmark, Finland and Norway) do not require you to have learnt their language before departing on exchange.
If you want to go to a country where English is not the first language, you must be committed to learning the language and studying as much as possible before you depart - the more you know on arrival, the easier the transition will be. It wouldn’t be acceptable for you to arrive on exchange with no knowledge of the language, as you would struggle to establish yourself on the program.
Of course, there are English-speaking destinations available if you are not interested in learning another language.
No, it's the host families who choose the student they wish to invite into their home. Based on the documents you will submit as part of your WEP application, one lucky family will choose to open their home and hearts to you, which is why there is no avenue for students participating in a Classic exchange program to choose a specific location.
It may be possible to live with an overseas family that you already know (excluding relatives of the student). However, the family will have to be screened and approved, prepared and supported by our partner organisation in the same manner as any other host family. School enrolment must also be available.
Host families come in all shapes and sizes. There is no set idea of what a family will look like, so it's very important that you have an open mind. Some families have children of your age or younger; some have children who have grown up and moved away; others have not had children. Some are single parent or single person families. Some families have same-sex parents.
We ask that a host family provides a safe and caring environment for a young person to live in. Whatever your family looks like, they will welcome you as part of their family.
Most of our families are based in suburban or rural areas. It is very rare that a family is based in a large city.
In the USA, you can pay an additional fee to request a region or state of your choice. Placement in these areas is not guaranteed but you can state a preference. You only pay the fee if you are placed in the area you have requested.
Alternatively, on our Preferred programs in the USA, Canada and Australia, you can choose where exactly you will live as you can choose your school or school district.
Families in every destination are selected by a similar process:
Home interview -a staff member/representative of our partner organisation visits the family at home. They discuss what is involved in hosting and ensure they have the right motivation for hosting. They also assess the home for suitability and comfort.
References – friends/colleagues of family members are contacted and asked about the family’s ability to host and care for a young person.
Police check – all adult members of the home must complete a criminal background check.
NB: in Japan it is not possible for a criminal check to be secured due to the stringent bureaucracy preventing adults from getting a check of this nature. Most families are known by the school and the school plays a role in recruiting families.
Our partner organisations aim to notify your placement to you at least one month before departure. We hope that it will be no later than this, but, on occasion, the information does arrive later. Placement details could arrive a few days after you lodge your application or several months later. Whatever the situation, you have to be patient and be ready to contact your host family as soon as you receive the placement information sheet.
No. In most destinations your visa will not allow you to work while on the program. We also discourage students from working as it can prevent you from participating fully in other activities while on exchange. Students can volunteer if they wish.
No. Visits from family and friends are definitely not allowed during the exchange program. Your parents can plan to collect you at the end of the program from your host family home, but otherwise they cannot visit. If they do wish to collect you, they must notify WEP so that we can arrange your flight home for the correct date and arrange an extension of your insurance policy where needed. Please note that any additional fees for these changes are not included in the program fee.
Independent travel is not permissible while on exchange. However, you will be able to travel with your host family, school, host organisation and other community groups such as sporting teams or scouts. Again, the foremost aim of the program is educational, and your priority for any holiday periods must be your host family, who will be investing a lot of time, energy and money into this experience - simply in return for your frienship and positive contribution to their household.
Most of our partner organisations offer additional trips or tours that students can join to see more of their host country. The relevant information will be shared with your prior to departure or just after arrival. The cost of the trips or tours is not included in your program fee, so if you wish to join them you should budget for the extra expenses.
More questions?

