Sunday, October 26, 2014
A Good Start to the Semester
Time here is flying by.
It’s crazy to think that this semester is almost halfway over now. The autumn semester definitely has a
different feel to it than the summer semester did. We spend a lot more time in class, and there
are so many students in the CIEF program that our schedules are staggered, so
we don’t wind up with as much free time to explore. It is a really good program though; I’ve
learned a lot of French in the time I’ve been here. There is a lot of casual conversation, so the
vocabulary we learn tends to be more useful, and native French-speakers tend to
have insights to rules of the French language that we never would learn back in
the US. We played Taboo in class the
other day, which was really fun. I think
we’re going to try and buy it so we can play in the residence from time to
time. The majority of my friends here
are Canadian now, although there are a couple of Norwegians and Colombians that
hang out with us. There is one other
girl in the residence from California, and there is a school-group here from
Wake Forest in North Carolina, but they live in host families so we don’t tend
to see them as much. Autumn semester has
more of a ‘real-university’ feel to it.
We spend most of our time in class or doing homework, and when we have
free time we tend to play sports, watch movies or go out drinking. I tried beach volleyball for the first time
last week, that was fun. Yesterday CIEF
hosted a trip to Geneva, Switzerland. It
got off to a rocky start, as there was a miscommunication between the school
and the residence and it was never relayed to the students that the departure
time had been moved from 6am to 7am, but the rest of the day was great. Geneva was a lot cooler than I had
expected. Naturally they sell Swiss Army
Knives and watches everywhere, and their ‘claim to fame’ is basically this huge
spout of water in the middle of the city, which isn’t really my idea of an
amazing attraction, but the city did have a lot of other things going for
it. We took a tour of the Red Cross
Museum, which was very modernized.
Everyone wears headsets which sense when you walk into a new room and
give you an introduction. They can also
give you more detail on exhibits that you are interested in, and there are
certain parts of the museum where there are screens with life-size figures
projected, which your headset can tune in to and you can listen to their
stories. The museum also has archives of
every prisoner of war they have record of, so that people can glance through
books and try to locate their family members.
I think I easily could have spent an entire day in that museum. After the museum, Stephan (our guide and one
of the teachers from CIEF) took us on a tour of the city, showing us all of the
major sites. It isn’t a very big city,
but it has a lot of history. We went
past the United Nations, which was really cool.
Apparently if you aren’t there on a Saturday, you can actually tour the
building. We had a few hours of free
time in the afternoon to roam the city before heading back, and Stephen showed
me and a couple of my friends a nice fondue place where we ate lunch. Someone should definitely start that trend in
the US, fondue is wonderful. And
naturally, we bought as much chocolate as we could carry before heading back to
the bus. All in all, it was a pretty
good day.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)