Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Multimedia Project


This is my slideshow about international students and their lives at Winthrop:





That is my podcast about international students and internships:





This is my three-part story:

First Part:

College can be hard sometimes. Students can be mean sometimes. Professors can be unfair sometimes. But sometimes it can hit one student harder than the other, and sometimes it happens without anybody even realizing it.

The U.S. has the world’s largest international student population, with nearly 600,000 students choosing to broaden their education and life experience in the U.S, according to the website www.voanews.com. In the mid-1950’s international student enrollment was reaching 35,000 and has improved over the past years. The website states that nearly 4 percent of all students enrolled in higher-level education are international students, and the numbers are growing.

Research shows that non-white students are not the only students at risk for experiencing ethnic and racial discrimination and culture shock. International students are also at great risk. Although university officials have tried to reduce ethnic and racial discrimination, researchers have not found significant reductions. The combination of ethnic and racial discrimination and homesickness can produce feelings of loneliness, alienation, depression, lower self-esteem, stress, chronic medical health problems and anxiety.

Discrimination experienced or perceived by international students can be harmful to their identities. In 2003, the European Journal of Social Psychology published the article “Constructing a minority group out of shared rejection” written by Schmitt, Spears, and Branscombe.

Schmitt, Spears and Branscombe found through path analysis that, in international students, perceived discrimination led to lower self-esteem and higher identification with other international students. They also state that identification with other international students led to an increase in self-esteem. This suggests that, under the stress of feeling discriminated against, international students seek out identification with other international students. Thus they counteract the negative effect of discrimination on their self-esteem.

Students coming to the U.S. may encounter difficulties beginning as early as obtaining permission to pursue education. Immigration regulations and interviews have become burdensome enough to discourage students from applying to U.S. institutions, according to www.universitiesintheusa.com. Aside from entrance obstacles, many international students are confronted with discrimination early upon entering the U.S. and it is a difficult reality for those who have never experienced it in their home country.

Although international students are important to the academic field for the different perspectives they offer, few services are typically provided to them by their host university. This situation is unacceptable because international students are very susceptible to culture shock. In a study of international students in 11 countries in 1979, Klineberg and Hull found that about 70 percent of international students either experienced or knew someone who experienced discrimination. The two authors wrote in their book “At a foreign university: An international study of adaptation and coping” that loneliness, a component of homesickness, seemed to be related to perceived discrimination. Klineberg and Hull state that those who perceive more discrimination also feel lonelier.

In 2007, Jenny Lee and Charles Rice from the University of Arizona researched the experience of international students and found that many international students were confronted with discrimination early upon entering the U.S. And it became a difficult reality for those who have never experienced discrimination in their home country. Lee and Rice reported that feelings of discomfort were exacerbated in classrooms where international students felt ignored in lessons or excluded by other students. Already feeling like an outsider, insecurities are heightened when they are left out of students’ study groups or social events. In some cases, international students felt unwelcome or distanced from faculty because of their personal sensitivity about their limited English abilities. Lee and Rice also found that some felt genuine aversion on the part of professors unwilling to be flexible with accommodation to non-standard speakers of English and were frustrated that people did not have empathy for how hard they work.

This research also states that international students are also often subject to misperceptions about their culture and so to easy stereotyping. International students’ explanation for this phenomenon is that Americans lack any desire to understand another culture.

International students may perceive more discrimination because of their non-American status, according to the Journal of Psychology article “An Exploratory Study of Perceived Discrimination and Homesickness” written by Poyrazli and Lopez. They may speak English with an accent, and they may belong to a visible racial or ethnic minority group. Regardless of the reason, it is important to note that a higher level of perceived discrimination could impede students’ acculturation or adjustment into their new environment and negatively affect students’ mental health

In 2000, Ying Lee and Tsai Lee compared in the article “Cultural orientation and racial discrimination” published in the Journal of Community Psychology that Chinese immigrant students with Chinese American students. They found that Chinese immigrant students were more likely to be separated or alienated from mainstream culture and more likely to experience discrimination than were Chinese American students.

Second Part

Frank Schwarz, 30, was for four years an international student at Winthrop University. During his master’s degree he worked as graduate assistant at the International Center where he worked closely with international students on campus. After his graduation he started to work as accountant for a company called Lance.

At the age of 17, Schwarz came to the U.S. and started his study at Winthrop University in Rock Hill, S.C. After four years in college he not only walked out with his undergrad degree but also with a master’s degree in accounting.

“I loved the job and the International Center,” said Schwarz. “It was a place where I felt like home rather than a place where I had to work. Through my work there I met a lot of great international students who became my close friends.”

Schwarz was often the first contact person for the international students at Winthrop. No matter what concerns, problem or questions they had, Schwarz was the person they wanted to talk to.

“The most offices and staff members at Winthrop are not equipped or do not know how to deal with international students,” Schwarz said. “This can be very frustrating for some students, but the people at the International Center try to help them as much as possible.”

Schwarz said that for students from other countries life is very different in the U.S. It is different from where they are coming from but that is part of the challenge when somebody studies abroad. However, for him the U.S. system seems to make it sometimes harder than it should be, and this can discourage students.

Schwarz said that international students face ethnic and racial discrimination at Winthrop but in most cases that happens because people do not know how to deal with international students or are not aware of the differences these students are facing in the U.S.

Feeling like an outsider in college can have severe consequences for international students. Schwarz said that in most cases they do not know anybody when they arrive in the U.S. Therefore a lot of them experience loneliness and feel misunderstood. Often international students develop strong bonds with other students from another country because they can identify with each other.

“The International Center at Winthrop does the best it can to support the international student and to be there for them whenever they need somebody,” Schwarz said. “American students and Winthrop faculty staff should try to be more aware of the international students and should not be afraid of talking to them.”

Third Part

Arnold Komola is a 25-year-old business student at Winthrop University. He came to the U.S. for his education and left his whole life he knew back home in Zimbabwe.

The first semester at college he had a hard time adapting to the new country and culture. At Winthrop he was the only student from Zimbabwe, and there was no one he could relate or talk to. “I felt lonely. But it was not really that I wanted to go home. I was just missing the feeling that I belong somewhere,” Komola said.

During his time in college he experienced situations where he felt discriminated against and seen as not equal to everybody else. One of his accounting professors always encouraged students to seek an internship, and this professor connected a lot of students with companies he knew.

However, when Komola used the opportunity to talk to the professor about an internship and if he had some advice, the response he got was not the response the professor normally gives to a student. Komola said that the professor was discouraging and gave Komola the feeling that he did not even want to talk to him.

But this was not the only time that Komola said he was treated unfair by this professor. In class most of the time the professor ignores Komola through avoiding eye contact with him and not including him in group discussions, Komola said.

“I had the feeling that he does not like me from the first time I met him,” Komola said.”It is not because that is just the way he deals with students. It is because he deals with American students in a friendlier and more enthusiastic way.” Komola does not know for sure why the professor treats him differently but he said that the professor has problems with talking to students who do not speak English properly.

Brooke Wadsworth is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Communication Arts and Sciences at the Pennsylvania State University. In his article “The Role of Identity Gaps, Discrimination, and Acculturation in International Students’ Educational Satisfaction in American Classrooms” published by the journal Communication Education he writes that together, with two of his colleagues, he examined a model of international students’ educational satisfaction in the U.S.

Wadsworth said that students and teachers with similar frames of reference are better able to communicate with one another with relative ease, as they are familiar with the language and norms of classroom interaction.

However, when cultural discrepancies are present, such as those between international students and American peers or instructors, problematic classroom communication is likely to occur. This can lead to a dissatisfying and potentially stressful educational experience for the international student.

“It is hard enough to put yourself out there and talk with everybody you meet in a language that you have not down pat,” Komola said. “So you do not need somebody who makes you feel more unsecure as you already are.”

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

International Students at Winthrop University

Leaving your family, friends, hometown and the life as you know it behind can be scary but at the same time it makes you open for new things and new people.

In spring 2008, 198 international students from 50 different countries were studying at Winthrop according to the Winthrop International Center Factbook. International students at Winthrop do not only learn new things in class moreover they learn new things outside of the class room and from each other.

Being an international student is an experience that people cannot learn from professors, the Internet, books or TV shows. The people you have met and the memories you have made together as international students are life changing.

International Students are a big family and this is a short insight into their lives at Winthrop and how these students enrich the lives of others.

SLIDSHOW: "International Students at Winthrop"

Thursday, October 21, 2010

State Superintendent Candidate Visits Winthrop


“Our schools are the foundation of our community,” Holleman said. And investing in children early would be one of his major goals.

Holleman

After 22 minutes on stage Frank Holleman suddenly stopped his political speech in front of approximately 30 Winthrop University students and faculty members on Sept. 30. For the next few seconds silence filled the room.

But even this short light failure did not trip him up. As an active candidate for the position of state superintendent of education in South Carolina, Holleman presented his opinion about main issues like voucher and tax credits and early childhood education with a strong voice and upstanding posture.

Holleman competes against his four opponents – Mick Yais, Doretha Bull, Tim Moultier and Tony Fayyazi - to displace Jim Rex who lost the possition in 2010.

“Our community has a commitment to provide high public education,” Holleman said. He opposes voucher and tax credits because it takes funds away from the community public schools and diverts the community from the critical work to improve public education.

Johnathan Cruse is a 20-year-old mass communication student at Winthrop University. He wanted to know Hollemann’s opinion as opponent of school vouchers when it comes to families who have not enough money to send their children to private school and school vouchers are their only option to get private education for their children.

Holleman said that school vouchers are not an effective way to improve academic outcome. He would tell the family that tax credit would do no good for their situation since poor families do not pay income taxes. “So an income tax credit is worthless,” said Holleman.

For those who do pay income tax, Holleman said that it would be ineffective because they have to pay the tuition up front to claim the credit at the end. That is why it is not an effective intervention.

Holleman’s strong belief in public education is reflected in the education of his three children. Two have graduated from the Greenville County public schools, and one is a senior at Greenville High School. Holleman and his wife Anne, who accompanied him that night, are graduates of the public schools of Oconee County, S.C.

Holleman served as U.S. Deputy Secretary of Education under former S.C. Governor and U.S. Secretary of Education Dick Riley. He has a long history in the field of public education. “I feel very deeply and strongly about public education,” said Holleman. “The strength of public education is not only the government but also the community.”

Other issues he discussed that night:

The importance of early childhood education

School building

Schools struggle financially

High School Graduation


Frank Holleman Website:

www.hollemanforeducation.com

South Carolina Department of Education Website:

http://ed.sc.gov/

South Carolina States Election Commission Website:

www.scvotes.org


What is your opinion about school vouchers also called education voucher? Please leave your feedback!

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Winthrop University spends millions for new operation center in Rock Hill



Another step forward was taken in terms of the sale of property by the City of Rock Hill to Winthrop University for $2.670.000.

Rock Hill Mayor: Doug Echols

The governing body of the City of Rock Hill approved the ordinance during the council meeting on Sept. 13. Over $3.000.000, Cherry Road Park property and the Rock Hill operation center are involved in the deal between the City of Rock Hill and Winthrop University

The mayor of Rock Hill, Doug Echols, and council members Susie Hilton, John Black, Kathy Pender, James Reno and Osbey Roddey met at City Hall of Rock Hill at 6 p.m. this evening. Carey Smith, city manager, presented the main facts about the sale of property.


For more than seven years, Winthrop University has developed a master plan that included properties that the city of Rock Hill and Winthrop agreed to collaborate on for purchase and sale. Smith said the city agreed with Winthrop that now would be a good time to consider the sale of the operation center on Columbia Avenue in Rock Hill as well as the purchase of 8.27 acres of Cherry Park Property.

“This is an excellent follow through and I think there are some real benefits that we gain here,” Smith said. He explained that the whole project is about a purchase, a sale and a leaseback agreement. The City sells 12.38 acres located at 349 Columbia Avenue in Rock Hill known as the operation center for $2,670,000 to Winthrop University.

However, the City can continue to use the operation property until it is possible to occupy the new operation center on Anderson Road which is at the moment under construction. The lease for each year would be $1 and ends on Dec. 31, 2011.

In addition, Winthrop sells 8.27 acres of Cherry Road Park Property for $500,000 to the City of Rock Hill. Smith said, “It does provide an ownership for the city, for firefighters, the park there and so forth.”

At the moment, however, Winthrop does not have the approval from the South Carolina Budget and Control Board. This being said, Hilton wanted to know if any issues are anticipated. Smith said, “You never know but we certainly do not anticipate any issues”

After a few changes of the sale of property ordinance, that needed “a little bit more clarity” according to Reno, the mayor and the council members approved the ordinance.

When the sale will be completed between is unclear at the moment. The next meeting between the City of Rock Hill and Winthrop University will be in December. Winthrop University expects to receive the approval by the South Carolina Budget and Control Board before the meeting.

“All the pieces begin to connect, and while we have to deal with all of them separately it is nice to see when the dots begin to connect and we begin to see the picture of ongoing improvement. I think that is what we are doing today,” said Echols.


Rock Hill - City Council Agenda:

http://www.cityofrockhill.com/_fileUploads/agendas/10age0913.pdf

City of Rock Hill – Contact Info:

http://www.cityofrockhill.com/contactUs.aspx

Operation Center Open House Info:

http://www.ci.rock-hill.sc.us/dynSubPage.aspx?deptID=19&pLinkID=68


In times when almost every department at Winthrop University faces budget cuts, do you think Winthrop University should spend millions on purchasing the new operation center? Please leave your feedback.


Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Thick Description

Looking up to the sky, you can see clouds covering all the blue and making it hard for the sun to break though. But even when you cannot directly see the sun, you are not able to open your eyes fully because of the white, shiny, glistening carpet of clouds.

Wind dances with leaves in the trees, and the music they perform sounds like waves of the ocean. Sometimes, the music is getting lauder, and sometimes it seems like it stops. But all of a sudden, it starts again.

You can feel when the wind caresses your skin. It feels like thin, soft, invisible silk wandering over your body. You can feel from which direction the wind comes, but it only last for a split second before it stops. So, you wait joyfully for the next wave.

Birds chirp in the distance, and now and then, cars are rushing by.

A bumblebee flies stressfully from one flower to the next. Every time when it reaches a flower it swings its wings as hard as possible to reach the yellow juicy pollen.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Always Things To Do


Students are supposed to work as hard as they can but at the end they could have done better.


The whole day turns around classes and things that have to be done. It is just the first week of classes at Winthrop University and the mind of students is already getting crazy about all the things they have to do.


Every day, Stefanie Walker, a 20-year-old business student from Charleston, puts together a list with things she has to do. “It feels good when I completed one thing of my list and can erase it,” Walker says, “but it does not take long and one of my professors gives me another assignment and my list grows longer again.”


Even though for most students at Winthrop University this is not the first semester of college but it is easy to forget how overwhelming especially the first days of classes can be. Students walk from one classroom to another and listen to their new professors who talk about all the assignments, presentations, essays and exams they have to take this semester.


Professors want that students stay on track with the syllabus so that they won’t struggle later on. So they try to make sure that students stay on top of their readings, think ahead about their essays and assignments, and start to work on their presentations and research papers as early as possible.


After a four months summer break without any lectures and books, this is too much at a time.

Walker says, “Often there is not enough time to finish all the things and I wished I could stop the time so that I could turn in my best work. That is why I always try to do things as soon as possible because you never know what else professors expect from you.”

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Learning For Life vs. Good Grades


What is more important to learn for life or to get good grades? For the long run I would say learning for life is more important. But in college grades are important to have a good start into the job world. Good grades and some job experiences during college are crucial to collect plus points which you need to compete with others for a job. So, to stick out of the crowd you have to offer more than only a bachelor degree.

The question is now if good grades should be from more value during college than to concentrate on taking something with you from each class. I found myself often in the situation where I studied for an exam and only memorized all the material I needed to know. But already 2 hours after the exam I could only remember 70 percent of the stuff I “studied”. After 6 hours the memorized material shrunk to 50 percent. The day after the exam I remembered around 40 percent and the week after I hardly remembered what the main topics of the material were. So, for me good grades do not mean that one person is better than another for a specific job. There are other criteria which should be considered first.

Many colleges show with their education systems that they try more and more to integrate the importance of learning for life in classroom. So students are able to get good grades for learning for life. At the end it comes all together and the things people learn, they learn them for life.