KatharineAnn
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- Joined
- May 26, 2008
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I also belong to the ¨started but gave up¨ category unfortunately! Reading your post is like dark humor to me, because I went through all that as well, the ¨talk to your consulate¨ ¨no, talk to the UBA¨, ¨no, there´s nothing WE can do¨ ¨yeah just sign up like an argentine, no biggie¨ ¨what? you can´t do that, you need to finish argentine HIGH SCHOOL exams first!¨ ¨how do I do that?¨ and so on so forth...
Anyhow, needless to say I never even entered the UBA. I took 3 of the 6 required Argentine high school exams (geography, language and lit, and educacion civica) and it was such a demoralizing experience for me I just didn´t have the energy, will, or desire to continue, because I knew the UBA was going to be another 5+ years of that kind of ridiculous disorganization causing frustration after frustration. I felt highly offended - I graduated number one in my class in college with a dual degree, then I come to this country and suddenly Im not a candidate for an UNDERGRAD degree, and must take high school exams, which you must take in your local high school, where the teachers treat you like CRAP (remember high school?) well in the public school I took exams at, they were worse. I didn´t know the Argie high school norms so I didnt bring some things to the exam that were just ¨obvious¨ and the teachers scolded me like I was 16 again, and only soften up (and even grew to like me) when they realized I was a foreigner and really trying hard and doing quite well for all the craziness that I was trying to do. They ended up congratulating me on my performance, my Spanish, and my will. I think they felt bad for mistreating me.
Anyhow after that I started studying for my remaining 3 exams, and in the midst of that realized that I just wasn´t up for many years of this. I have now deciding that studying in Argentina is not for me, and plan to either get a master´s degree from the US if I plan to live there, or go to Europe to study hopefully in the future, where international students are probably a little better treated, since they´re just a tad bit more common
Anyway, if you´re in it for the long haul here, go for it, and I wish you lots of luck and more than anything, voluntad!
Anyhow, needless to say I never even entered the UBA. I took 3 of the 6 required Argentine high school exams (geography, language and lit, and educacion civica) and it was such a demoralizing experience for me I just didn´t have the energy, will, or desire to continue, because I knew the UBA was going to be another 5+ years of that kind of ridiculous disorganization causing frustration after frustration. I felt highly offended - I graduated number one in my class in college with a dual degree, then I come to this country and suddenly Im not a candidate for an UNDERGRAD degree, and must take high school exams, which you must take in your local high school, where the teachers treat you like CRAP (remember high school?) well in the public school I took exams at, they were worse. I didn´t know the Argie high school norms so I didnt bring some things to the exam that were just ¨obvious¨ and the teachers scolded me like I was 16 again, and only soften up (and even grew to like me) when they realized I was a foreigner and really trying hard and doing quite well for all the craziness that I was trying to do. They ended up congratulating me on my performance, my Spanish, and my will. I think they felt bad for mistreating me.
Anyhow after that I started studying for my remaining 3 exams, and in the midst of that realized that I just wasn´t up for many years of this. I have now deciding that studying in Argentina is not for me, and plan to either get a master´s degree from the US if I plan to live there, or go to Europe to study hopefully in the future, where international students are probably a little better treated, since they´re just a tad bit more common
Anyway, if you´re in it for the long haul here, go for it, and I wish you lots of luck and more than anything, voluntad!