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Definitely if you have the time and if your course will allow it - go on exchange. It
was honestly one of the best things I've ever done for my degree.
I think it was just a general interest to further my language studies so I thought may
as well do it in China and Shanghai is one of the biggest international cities, if not
the biggest international city in China. So I thought why not?
The international office and the exchange program they gave me a travel grant of about
$5,000 which was really helpful and then as a business student the Curtin Business School
also gives me $3,000 on top of that.
The university I went to was Shanghai University. So when I arrived there it was about lat...
early evening, I put my bags down, checked in and then I wanted to buy, you know just
some necessities and I didn't know where to go.
So I went downstairs to the lobby and I asked the man oh wheres the nearest shopping centre
or supermarket. He pointed to a map and I looked at the map and felt helpless and then
I hear these two voices behind me speaking in English and I turn around and go oh my
god like you speak english can you please help me. And yeah they took me around to the
local shopping centre, treated me to dinner, showed me where to buy like you know water,
toilet paper, SIM cards and one of the guys - Richard - he turned out to be one of my
really really good friends during my semester.
We had a pretty full on class schedule. Classes were about 20 hours a week. When ever we could
escape the classroom we'd travel and explore Shanghai city.
Shanghai is huge - the city itself has a population of 23 million. My friend actually devised
a little game called Train Roulette. So what we'd do is hop on to the train and we don't
even know which way, which direction its going and then once we decided to go we'd point
at the map and go yep we'll exit there and we get off at the station and we'll explore
the area. This one time we got off at a random stop - I can't even remember what it was called
- it was a little place but we walked past a firing range - shooting range. So that was
the first I've ever held a gun.
But things like that happen in China!
Yeah and my other good friend Kimberly - she was from the UK. And she's got a similar background
to me. Both of our parents are Cantonese - from Hong Kong sooooo... but we got a long really,
really well. And at the end of the semester she felt like a sister and which was weird.
You think going on exchange when you'll only be there for a semester you wont really develop
strong friendships you know you compare them to your friends back home - who you've known
for years - and you think oh you know I'll make some friends but they wont be that close.
You live and eat with them every day! For a semester so you kind of become really really
good friends.
China is a great like place for all different types of food. I mean in Beijing I managed
to try a whole heap of different type of food. There's a strip called Wang Fu Jing and its
famous for their street food, in particular creepy crawlies and bugs. So on that one night
my friends and I ventured to try everything and in a course of an hour we had Starfish,
Baby Shark, Tarantula, Scorpions, Silk Worms, Sea Horse. It was an interesting experience,
definitely.
Went to Tibet for three weeks so that was an amazing trip. We went to the base camp
of Mount Everest. Saw the Himalayas and we managed to spend one sunset and one sunrise
at Mount Everest. And it was really beautiful.
I was lucky enough to get a job at a marketing consultancy here in Perth and my employer
said to me that definitely one of the reasons I stood out from all the other applicants
was this international experience. The fact that I put myself out there. That, you know,
I've got out of comfort zone and you know gained this international experience.
They look at, you know, exchanges and international internships as a plus. To all the students
out there considering the idea of an exchange - I mean it is a daunting process at first.
You think theres a lot of paperwork and its not that easy to get in, but I think when
you just start talking to the exchange office. You know the coordinators are really lovely
people and after that you know once you kind of take that first step you'll realise that
its actually quite an easy process and you'll find yourself you know wanting it a lot and
you know really working for it and its - at the end of the day it is one of the best things
that I've ever done