Wednesday, 2 September 2009

Culture Shoch!!!

Culture shock It's a simply and very frequent way to express the confusing and nervous feelings that a person may have after leaving a familiar culture to live in a new and different one. When you move to a new country, you're exposed to a lot of changes. That can be exciting and motivating, but it can also be devastating, you may feel sad, anxious, frustrated, and want to go home.
It's usual to have difficulty adjusting to a new culture norms. People from other cultures may have grown up with values and viewpoints that differ from yours. That’s why the things they talk about, their behaviour, the way they express themselves and the meaning of their ideas maybe is extremely different from what you are used to. In general culture shock is temporary, however sometimes takes longer to digest it and for some people could be impossible to pass trough out
To identify what culture shock is, it helps to understand the concept of culture. Obviously genes establish a big part of how you look and act. However our environment has a big consequence on our exterior appearance and behaviour also. The surrounding is a big part of our culture background. Culture is made awake of the frequent things that members of a community learn from family, friends, media, literature, and even strangers. These are the things that influence our way to act and communicate with each other.
When people go to a new place, often enter a culture that is different from the one they left. Sometimes their culture and the new culture are similar like Mexico with Spain for instance. Other times, they can be very different and contradictory like China with England. What might be perfectly normal in one culture might be unusual in another one.
The differences between cultures can make it very difficult to adjust to the new surroundings. Persons may encounter unfamiliar clothes, weather, and food as well as different people, schools, and values. They may find themselves hostile to do things in the new environment that were easy back home. Dealing with the differences can be very disturbing; those feelings are part adjusting to a new culture.

Wednesday, 22 July 2009

Survey: Food Budget for international students from LCC

On 22nd July 2009, a survey was carried out among 30 International Students from Pressessional English Course at LCC. The purpose of the survey was to discover the food budget for International Students so that information can be of help to coming classes.
The survey was directed to current International Student. There were six questions, (all of them involved multiple choices).

The first question concerned preference about eating outside in a restaurant or cooking by oneself. The next four questions were all concerned with food expenses. At length, the last one was related to the food expenditure as a percentage of the total weekly budget.

The main findings were as follow. “Cooking by yourself” was the most popular answer, selected by 67% of the students. The other 33% prefers to eat outside. There was a clear trend in spending between £20 to £50 weekly in groceries, 77% of the interviewed chose this answer. 53% of the students usually eat out one to three times a week, followed by 4 - 6 times a week option, chosen by 30%.

On average of how much they spend when eating out 53 % pointed out that they spend between £11 and £20 per meal. Followed by 30% with £10. Nobody chose the £21 or more option. Including groceries and eating out, 40% of the students used to spend between £30 and £50 weekly, followed by over £71, chosen by 23% and £51-£70 range, selected by 20%. Only 17% chose less than £30. Finally, 64% of the students spend between 31% and 50% of their weekly budget on food.

If any conclusion is given from the survey, they are perhaps, as follows.
International Students from the Pressessional English Course at LCC have been thinking in a considerable food budget before they came to London. Most of the meals are done cooking by themselves. On the other hand, the students like a couple of meals out during the week. Probably they would eat out more often but the budget would increase too much. On average one of their meals out is the third part of the money that they spend weekly on food.

Sunday, 19 July 2009

hair band project

In the first week of the Pressessional English Course, we knew that we had to do a Marketing Project... after a couple of weeks the moment to start to work just arrived, and with it, the time to choose the members of each team. My team was composed by Enya, Oat, the two designers, Chico and Sally and finally me. Actually I think we were a very nice team but to be honest, I was afraid about working in a group. In Mexico group work is part of the tasks at Universities and always is interesting trying to understand the way different persons think, but here the predicament was also that everybody was from different cultures, backgrounds, etc. Anyway at the end everything was ok.

It was very easy to be participative, to explain our ideas and work. We found a good product and we just tried to develop the marketing points. At some point Oat wanted to develop another product because this is a little bit girlish but we decided to vote and do the things democratic, he lost but he accepted that.

I am proud that we managed to work well and that our product was well received. Even though we didn’t win the competition I feel our product was the one that was the easiest to actually develop. Additionally I liked the fact that all groups presented and we could learn from other presentations not only for our own but for future projects as well.

Academic Writing

One of the most important things in Academic Writing is to be precise and specific, something that normally we don’t do. We have to try focusing on one thing at the time instead of talking about everything. Academic writing involves thinking, to be reflective and critical about the topics at study.
Academic writing also is based in having an Argument, in other words, knowledgeable information. One argument needs a strong thesis statement. Academic way looks to prove something through examples and analyses. By examining the argument, and backing it up, it’s easy to see the way your mind works.
Just like we read in one of the articles, academic writing is centred on questions of interest to the academic community (from scholars to scholars). Sometimes it’s very improbable that you can get away with general and almost meaningless topics. That’s why the academic community expects that you fully analyze the texts you read.
For me, other crucial difference between Academic Writing and High School Writing is the professor expectations because the papers are judged by a much higher standard. You will not just be judged on the quality of your ideas alone, but also on your presentation of those ideas, so you will be expected to have perfect grammar, spelling, and structure. It may sound difficult, more for foreigners like us, but I think that being forced to write in an academic environment is one of the best methods to learn how to think.
I’m sure that after our own Masters and after living immersed in an Academic environment, writing and critical thinking will improve, I’m conscious it means hard work and a lot of frustration but I hope with a happy ending.

Thursday, 9 July 2009

Monday, 6 July 2009

It's hard to say goodbye



As everything in life, all the things that start have to finish, the problem is when they were so good it’s even harder to say goodbye to them...

This Friday my husband finished his two years MBA, and although we were travelling a lot to different places, and in my case I just started to live definitely in London a few months ago, (in other words without trips or travels to Mexico) I feel that we already have a family in London. We made great friends here and now is time to say goodbye to some of them. The majority are from Latin-America but also in our group we have some people from Europe, America and Asia... you know is normal in London to have people from many places in the same group. In Mauricio’s generation there were around 315 persons with around 65 different nationalities, that was amazing!! Anyway...

A big number of them have to go back to their countries, even when they were planning to stay here. Why? The reason is this horrible crisis that is involving all the countries over the world. Obviously some countries more than others and England is one of the most affected because London is one of the biggest financial centres in the world and precisely the financial sector is one of the most distressed all over the world... Many people have been laid off from their jobs and there are some others that cannot find one. It’s difficult for everyone, but it is even more for us, the foreigners, because the companies prefer to give jobs to British people before other nationalities and to be honest, is very logic and understandable.

Back to the point we are in the middle of one of the saddest moments, we already started to say goodbye to people that we love, and we know deep in our hearts that we won’t see some of them ever again.