Infanta Sofia is wrapping up her first year at Forward College in Lisbon, and from what is known, she has done quite well. The institution adheres to the academic standards of the London School of Economics, so it’s not exactly a low-profile university.
According to sources close to the college, there are three areas where the Infanta has most clearly found her place, and together they paint an academic profile that is quite consistent with what is expected of an institutional figure of her generation.

Her first great passion is micro- and macroeconomics applied to global issues. Not as abstract theory, but as a tool to understand how economic fluctuations are linked to today’s social and climate challenges.
She also excels in French and German, languages she practices daily on a campus with a strong international presence. For someone who already has multilingualism in her family’s DNA, it makes sense that this is a field where she thrives.
And then there’s something that speaks volumes about her learning style: her affinity for group work.
Forward College is deeply committed to collaborative learning and active debate, favoring this approach over traditional lectures, and Sofía fits well into that dynamic. According to the same sources, negotiation simulations are among the activities where her ease is most evident.

In this final stretch of the course, she has also delved into Political Science and Moral Philosophy, rounding out a remarkably solid curriculum for her first year.
Interestingly, economics, languages, and critical thinking aren’t a random combination. It’s precisely the foundation someone needs when they’ll eventually have to navigate international forums, negotiate meaningful speeches, and understand the world beyond formal protocol.
Although little Sofia is still in her first year, her academic journey is already heading in a clear direction.
