T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1193.1 | it works at times | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Fri Aug 23 1991 11:30 | 7 |
| Yes, I know of a family who had a boy from Germany... the boy used to
bring his girl friends into the house to sleep with him... and the
family had pretty stright rules within the family (absolutely no sex
outside marriage) so there was a bit of trouble... my friend 'caught'
them in bed, so she called the girl's mother and told her to come and
get her daughter out of her house!
There was hard feelings with the boy...ever since.
|
1193.3 | Best experience in my life!
Best experience in my life!
| CUPMK::LEHRER | | Sat Aug 24 1991 11:50 | 48 |
|
I had an exchange student from Italy ten years ago through the AFS
program. We have a wonderful relationship and I love her as if
she were my own daughter (she still calls me "Mom"). As a matter of
fact, my husband and I travelled to Italy two years ago to go to her
wedding!
There were a lot of factors, though, that made this such a special
relationship. I don't have any kids of my own and Elena came from
a dysfunctional family. Her father travelled and lived all over
Europe and Africa (ostensibly for his job) and her mother was abusive.
To make a long story short, we both knew when she got off that bus in
August of 1981 and we hugged for the first time that we had something
very special.
Unfortunately, there were other families that year that did not have
such a great experience. I'm convinced that part of having a good
experience is purely the "luck of the draw." You have to realize that
most of these kids come from wealthy families - they have to pay
the equivalent of about $2000 to come here for the year - and they can
be very spoiled, independent and demanding.
For example, my best friend and her family hosted a student from Austria
last year. When my friend explained the family rules (take turns cleaning
the bathroom, keep your room clean, help with the dishes, be considerate
of others by keeping the stereo to a dull roar, etc), the student said,
"What is this? A prison?" The student had already graduted from
school in Austria, so the school year here meant nothing to her. Con-
sequently, she never studied and was bored out of her mind in class.
(European students also tend to be miles ahead of our kids in school.)
In my opinion, though, this match of family and student was a mistake
from the beginning. The student was from an extremely active, athletic
family and my girlfriend and her family are very sedentary and very
rearly go anywhere. It's important that you and the student have the
same interests. (The student ended up going to another family in
January, by the way.)
Before this gets any longer...if you want to talk about it some more,
send mail (cupmk::lehrer) or call DTN: 264-7231 (Merrimack, NH).
Ellen
P.S. My neighbors just got a student from Yugoslavia last Wednesday.
Can't wait to see how that goes!
|
1193.4 | Go For It ! | KEMER::AKMAN | | Mon Aug 26 1991 09:01 | 43 |
| I was an exchange student myself -some 16 years ago- from Istanbul,
Turkey to Scarsdale, New York through the AFS Intercultural
International Programs. Certainly, it was the most valuable year of my
life. I still correspond with and visit my host family.
What is important in these exchange programs is the quality of the
experience the exchange organization provides. There are many exchange
programs around these days, and I am afraid many of them are "fly-by-
night" tourism organizations who are out there to make quick boxs.
Whereas what differentiates a good sojourn experience from a poor one
is the amount of importance the exchange organization provides to the
the support, on-going orientation, and the screening and placement process.
In the field of cross-cultural psychology, an "intercultural learning
experience" is defined as; "a new learning situation, where learners of
different cultural backgrounds are helped to see their differences as
resources to draw from and to gain an awareness of self rather than end
up as deviations from established norms, one where each culture is explained
in the context of others through a process that situmulates doubts
about self, curiosity for others and understanding of the interaction
between the two. Such a process should involve the learners
intellectually as well as emotionally".
Hence that both the exchange student (or sojourner) and the hosts are
"learners" in this process. Therefore, it is not really important to
have a "German" student (who is, let's elaborate, a great soccer
player, loves to play bridge and chess, speaks fluent English, belongs
to the same Faith and comes from a family where both of his parents work
in the computer industry !) who would match our preconceived notions but
to have a "sojourner" who has realistic expectations about his/her
exchange year and who is "compatable" with your host family/community
and culture.
And of course, it is equally important to find out about the
organization that provides the exchange; i.e. what kind of screening,
selection and placement process they use; how many/what kind of
orientation (pre-departure/post-arrival, during and end-of-the stay)
do they provide; and their support/counceling system.
If what you are considering is an AFS Program, I would definitely
recommend it.
Murat
|
1193.5 | AFS is *WONDERFUL* | CTHQ2::MOHN | blank space intentionally filled | Wed Aug 28 1991 15:55 | 29 |
| We had an AFSer from Spain several years ago. It was a WONDERFUL
experience; Marisa was (and is) an exceptional person. FWIW, we had
practically no commonality with her growing up experience; as someone
mentioned before, part of the idea is to be open to living the
DIFFERENCES between the cultures.
We are still Mom and Dad to her, and she'll be our "daughter" forever.
Through her we have made many contacts in Spain with other wonderful
young people and their families. We've also been twice to Spain to
visit and have been treated royally, even though none of the families
involved is wealthy.
BTW, I've been involved with AFS in one capacity or another since 1955
in high school when I got involved with bringing some of the first AFS
kids to the school. My sister went to India as an AFSer, and we are
still counted as part of her Indian extended family. My wife went to
the Philippines as an AFSer, and we met primarily because of an AFS
connection.
It doesn't always go as well as my experience has been; people will
insist on being people and on having differences which are difficult to
reconcile. This is recognized by AFS, and they always have back-up
plans for students in their care. There are no guarantees, but the
benefits are well worth the risk. Call me on DTN 227-3900 if you want
more info.
Regards,
Bill
|
1193.6 | You need the experience! | ACTGSF::BERG | | Thu Aug 29 1991 23:23 | 18 |
| I have hosted several Japaneese students for short terms in language
training. It was an experience well worth the effort. I learned as much
if not more than they did. I would do it again, in a New York second!
My sister hosts an exchange student every year from all over the world.
Her last was from Australia The boy she has this year is from Scotland.
All the students are very intellegent and well mannered. They are here
because they want to be here. They seldom get involved in areas that
they shouldn't. All are amazed with how our qualitity of life is so
good. My sister already has five children, all the students have been
wonderful with them. There is never a question of how things will be.
Each student is different, but all are appreciative for the
hospitility. Most negative experiences that I have heard of, were with
families that *I* would not want to live with myself. Others didn't
understand the customs of thier guests, IE: the Japaneese are paying
you the highest compliment by being noisy eaters.
|