Giving the exams, in Erasmus, should be easier. Abroad programs are much less extensive than in Italy, the idea of \u200b\u200bstudying memory in almost six hundred pages of a book here does not touch anyone, theoretically, the professor should be subject to the sympathy factor-Erasmus. That factor that everyone should have, or at least one imagines to have, a normal burst of good feelings toward those students who leave their ordinary universities and prove in a foreign language with some 'stuttering to pass examinations abroad.
In France, for French students, all examinations are written. Only one call for each subject, testing three-hour sessions, three weeks. And to pass seven subjects per semester. (Ok that do not have manuals for six hundred pages, but have yet to study them too). For Erasmus, and oral exams to pass a number of subjects chosen by the student and the University of departure. The post begins with "giving the exams, in Erasmus, should be easier" because these examinations oral examinations are true. A little 'other than Italian, but the idea that an examination of Erasmus and cordial conversation on climate, kitchen or living abroad in general is not that exactly matches reality. You sit in front of the professor, there are cards with questions such as drawing lots, they leave you fifteen minutes to prepare a reply and throw down ideas on paper and then fifteen minutes to go and meet the professor. The questions are not generally "as found in Paris," but something more like "francovitch the ruling of the court of Justice of the European community" or "Article 234 of the Treaty of Rome."
It also considered that the time and desire to learn is that they are at their peak while their lives and take advantage of living in a place like Paris, 'sti tests are not exactly a walk. Or at least a couple of weeks-we two, do not overdo it-quietly at home with your notes to repeat and repeat in the French you need to go.