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October 31st, 2007How much does it cost an abroad student to live in Australia?

Worldwide students can live separately in Australia for as little as AUD $265 a week, but prices vary substantially depending on the suburb and type of accommodation you want. Like all cities, Australia boasts a wide range of accommodation options to suit all budgets and tastes.

Here is a guide to weekly living expenses in Australia:

(A)Accommodation: $90-$250

(B)Gas & electricity: $25

(C)Telephone/postage: $20-$30

(D)Groceries: $80

(E)Transport $15-$20

(F)Clothing, entertainment etc $35+

(G)Total weekly spend $265 - $440

What are my housing options?

All Australian education institutions have a legal duty to assist new international students with accommodation on their arrival in Australia, and many have additional support to help you settle in for the longer term.

(A) On-campus: On-campus accommodation, university residences and residential colleges: may be situated on-campus or within a short distance, generally includes a single furnished bedroom, access to computers and the internet and a shared laundry and kitchen facility. Most are supervised and provide meals on weekdays.

(B) Home stay: involves living with an Australian family and allows you to experience Australian family life. Home stay is the most common form of accommodation for high school students but is also taken up by some tertiary students.

(C) Private rental: affordable right in the city centre and inner suburbs of Australia, many within easy walking distance to central universities and institutions. Prices vary greatly depending on geographical area, demand, the number of people sharing and facilities provided. For rooms, houses and apartments for rent, look in Australia’s daily newspaper, The Advertiser.

(D) International residences: aim to assist students with the transition from living at home to independent living, by providing a quiet, managed environment for students who may prefer hostel living to the dynamics of shared households.

October 29th, 2007Process for Marriage Visa To The UK

Spouses of UK citizens or permanent residents (mostly those with indefinite leave to stay) may come to the UK under marriage visa category, and are able to work as soon as a visa is granted.

You will require to meet the following marriage visa requirements:

1 If you have been jointly for less than four years you are granted a marriage visa for a trial period of two years. If you are still married and living together at the end of two years in the UK permanent residence (properly known as indefinite leave to remain) will usually be granted.

2. If you have been together for four years or more outside the UK you will be granted imprecise leave to remain (permanent residence) in the UK without having to live in the UK for two years.

3 The UK citizen or permanent resident must have actually met their non-UK spouse. This is to prevent a circumstances that occurs sometimes in arranged marriages where the husband and wife have never met.

4 You must intend to live together permanently with your spouse in order to obtain a spouse visa.

5 Accommodation for the couple, and any dependants, must be suitable and available.

6 Spouses seeking to come to the UK on the basis of marriage to a UK national should apply for entry clearance before entering the UK.

7 You must possess sufficient funds to pay you and your spouse’s living expenses and those of any dependants without claiming public funds. Public funds cover various benefits paid by the Government if you are currently looking for work, if you are on a low income and if you are in various other situations

8 If you have a visa valid for six months or less in the UK you cannot change status to a spouse visa.

9 Children of the marriage who are under 18 years old are allowed entry to the UK as dependants, and can make their application at the same time as the main applicant.

10 Following a total period of three years in the UK if you meet the residence requirements you may then apply for UK citizenship.

October 26th, 2007The Benefits of Study abroad ?

In advertising study abroad programs we generally flaunt the overall experience of learning from living in another culture as its own reward. Students are often said to get as much from the intercultural experience as they do from their academic work. This assertion has been supported by research, although research findings are mixed both in terms of methodology and results (see sidebar below).

Reasons why the experience of study abroad is considered to be valuable include the following:

1 Students have the opportunity, perhaps for the first time, to become active, reflective learners and draw on daily experiences to expand and deepen what is learned in formal studies.

2 Students learn to compare the ways that key worldwide issues are approached in different cultures (this can be assessed and may be attached to academic study).

3 Students can practice a language (this can also be and often is assessed).

4 Students develop the ability to thrive in and adapt to a culture different from their own.

5 Students engage in life-altering experiences, ones that challenge their fundamental assumptions about the world.

6 Finally, students learn to be self-sufficient, to thrive in a foreign country, and to become resourceful when the resources are not so obvious.

One of the goals I have not found listed in study abroad catalogs is the effect of the integration of experience in another culture into the student’s academic program and life experience upon return from the host country. We all know that students change majors, alter their educational directions and friendship networks, and often redefine their life goals as a result of living abroad. This does not always occur in ways that are the most beneficial because they receive little guidance during the process. While sensitive study abroad advisers or faculty may be open to this kind of exploration, students do not know how to ask for it.

To be sure, students learn a great deal from experiences outside the classroom even when they stay on American campuses for their entire educational careers. But I suggest that the cross-cultural experience gained from studying, living, and functioning effectively in another culture requires a developmental process that is unique and can never be achieved by remaining at home. Moreover, it is not an experience limited to the young; it is part of the process, as Milton Bennett states, of moving from ethnocentrism to ethno relativism.

Document Culture Learning

The “Bennett Model” has six stages in the development of intercultural sensitivity: Denial, protection, Minimization, Acceptance, Adaptation, and Integration. Within these stages may be subsets that further refine the stage. Students themselves testify that significant personal change is maybe the most important part of their stay in another culture. explore how they have changed and the developmental process they have experienced rarely occurs. How might this be recognized so that credit is responsibly awarded?

There are a number of ways to document culture learning, the growth of intercultural skill, and the internal shift in student’s perspective. The idea of journaling comes up repeatedly when the issue of documenting informal learning is discussed. This can be done systematically so that the student learns from his or her journal and uses it as a reference for added work. Credit-bearing courses on culture learning provide direction for journal keeping.

Generally, what is most important is to help students notice what is going on around them and to consciously attend to what behavior and events mean and how they are impacted by them.

Identification can be assigned to help students reflect on their experiences as they go through them and help them explore how their perspectives, attitudes, skills, and knowledge have changed as a result of their experiences. A comparative paper might be required that explores a particular component of society as it is revealed by mundane events not normally explored for their deeper significance. In this way, the implicit can be made explicit and thus available for examination and learning.

We know from research conducted with training Peace Corps volunteers that explicit information, while interesting and useful, does not contribute to intercultural effectiveness. It is the less visible, implicit aspects of culture that must be learned and navigated if one is to become intercultural competent, and it is the ability to manage one’s reactions to cross-cultural experiences that contributes to success in cross-cultural situations.

Moreover to preparing students to function well in the international arena, clear educational advantages result from raising informal learning abroad to a conscious, formal level of comprehension:

A. What the student learns from living in another culture is “marked.” Students are not left to muddle through what they think may have occurred but are given assistance and guidance. Learning is identified in a way that allows integration and conscious application of the acquired skills and knowledge in other settings.

B. There is an opportunity to resolve hidden, negative feelings either for the host country or for the student’s native land. Discovering how these feelings grew allows educators to recommend ways to help students exit their overseas experience with at least some balance in judging either culture and recognition of why they have these reactions (with the possibility of resolving some of them).

C. Students can be prevented from “shoeboxing” the entire study abroad experience, pulling it off the shelf only for special occasions, and helped to find ways to apply what they have learned.

D. Students can focus on learning about implicit culture, the level at which most conflict occurs between people from different cultural backgrounds.

E. Documenting informal learning allows those of us who “market” study abroad to evaluate whether claims that study abroad includes a life-changing experience are valid and to further document the quality of this experience and what it teaches.

We know very well that living and studying abroad has a significant impact on students. Treating that impact, and the learning it engenders, as worthy of credit is the next step in dealing with the full range of educational benefits available in the study abroad portion of international education.

These individuality do not emerge in classrooms. They grow as people function in a foreign culture. If we truly believe that these individuality are important enough to be encouraged in students going abroad, then we need to look carefully at how growth in these areas can be measured–not only to permit students to acquire credit but to raise the growth of these characteristics to the level of importance that academic credit bestows.


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