Monday, September 8, 2014

A Week of Culture

Hey guys!  I suppose I really am overdue for a blog posting at this point.  Things have been pretty crazy the past couple of weeks, my friends and I have been trying to fit in as much culture as possible since the majority of them are leaving before the end of the month.  We spend most of our afternoons in the town center since our classes are usually over between noon and 3pm, and our teachers tend to not give very much homework.  Our absolute favorite place to go is Coffee & Muffin, which is a small café which serves ridiculously addictive chocolate milkshakes.  It’s usually perfect for the afternoon too, since the weather here makes it difficult to dress properly for the day.  It tends to be fairly cold when we have to get up and go to classes, and our classrooms are typically cold, but by the afternoon we find we are sweating.  We took a taste tour of the city the other day which was really fascinating.  Dijon is known for three things: mustard, cassis (aka black currants) and pain d’epices, which roughly translates to spice bread although I wouldn’t describe it as particularly spicy.  My favorite is the orange-flavored one.   The tour was really fascinating.  The guide took us all around the city, and described the history of food in Dijon, as well as showing us where we could get the best foods in the city, and showing us how the local products are made.  We got to sample several foods, however this didn’t go quite as well as Helena, Katie and I would have liked as we made the amateur mistake of going for crepes before the taste tour, and found that we could barely stand the thought of food for the rest of the day.  I also managed to run into someone else from Connecticut in town the other day!  There was an exhibit with an old American Field Services ambulance, and I got excited when I noticed that the license plate on the vehicle was one of the old Connecticut ones.  The man working the exhibit overheard me, and told me that he was from Franklin, and has a friend he works with who lives in Glastonbury!  It always shocks me how small this world can be.  Yesterday was the 2014 Dijon Velotour (basically a bike race, except you aren’t really racing), so a bunch of us decided that we wanted to participate.  Turns out it’s really cheap to rent a bike for the weekend here.  8,000 participants showed up to tour the city on their bikes, and we were taken all over, through various buildings, including a church and a greenhouse, and along the canal.  There was entertainment all along the course, from a stuntman on a unicycle to live musicians at both the halfway point and endpoint.  The whole thing had the feel of a festival which had been stretched out throughout the city. Katie, Helena and I did the main course, as well as the longer of the two detours, for a total of about 25k, or 15 miles.  All of the costumes that people decided to don for the event were hilarious, and all-in-all it was just a really cool way to spend a Sunday.  Definitely a unique part of their culture here.

Sunday, August 31, 2014

La Ville

                
              


Wandering Dijon

Helena and Katie (two of the English girls) and I decided to follow the Owl Path around the city yesterday.  This is a self-guided tour, in which you can pick up a booklet for a couple of dollars from the local tourism center, and then follow these little golden owls that have been paved into the sidewalk.  It’s supposed to take you by all of the major attractions in the city, as well as give you a bit of background about each one.  It’s really nice because the city has a lot of really cool buildings in it (with really amazing architecture – I’m a bit of a nerd for gothic-style architecture) and the city center isn’t really that big, so the entire tour can be done in about an hour.  The only thing we wound up going into was the local Notre-Dame church (which was absolutely incredible) but we got to see where all kinds of things were, such as the Fine Arts Museum, the Palace of the Dukes of Burgundy, the local market (set up Tuesday through Saturday) and various parks.   We also raided the tourism office for pamphlets so we’d have plenty of things to keep ourselves entertained in the upcoming weeks (museums, tours of the mustard factory, castles not far from the city) and picked up some of the event flyers that were being handed out in the streets.  Personally, I want to go to a salsa dancing class that is offered every week from Tuesday-Thursday for various levels of dancer which is only 5 euro.  Apparently there is some kind of international music and dance festival going on right now, so every half hour or so we stumbled across performers dancing through the streets in full costume.  Clearly, this is going to be a very interesting semester.

“How was school today?” “School-like.”

Apparently the way this semester will be working is I am first in a month long language-intensive course with all of the CIEF summer students, and then in early October I will be joining the Université de Bourgogne’s normal students at the beginning of their semester.  I will be leaving about a month before their semester typically ends, so I’m not really sure how all of that is going to work out, but I suppose it’ll all work itself out eventually.   We took a placement test on the first day, and I tested into the 4th of 5 levels, so I guess my ten years of studying the language are paying off.  There are nine other people in my class, however three of them finished their last day in Dijon on Friday (it seems that the schedule for the summer classes isn’t really set, there are certain days of testing that you can join on and then you can stay as long as you like) so I guess our class is about to get smaller.  I think that the level five class is even smaller, so I am pretty happy with where I tested percentage-wise (I’m guessing there are about 100 students in the program.)  One thing that we did find interesting is that the majority of the English and Arabic speakers seem to have tested into the upper levels, while the lower levels are made up mostly of the Asian students.  I suppose this is because English is so close to French that we have an easier time grasping the majority of the vocabulary, and many Arabic speaking countries also dabble in French.  I do find it interesting though that so many people were willing to come to a foreign country with such a poor grasp of the language.  I feel as if I would be terrified to go into a region where nearly everyone speaks a language that I can’t really understand.  I haven’t decided yet whether or not level 4 really seems fitting for me.  Some students do petition to change levels if they feel that they are in over their heads, or aren’t being challenged enough, but since it is only a month I think I am going to just stay put.  Sometimes I feel as if I am in the right level, as the material does seem to be about what I should be focusing on, specific grammar points and such, however the pace at which the class moves seems really slow to me.  However, I don’t think that I am the only one which feels this way.  One of the English girls is also in my class, and she says that she feels as frustrated as I do by the pace at which the teacher moves.  Maybe this is just typical of French professors, I’m not really sure.

My New Room

   

The Accommodations

I honestly still haven’t made up my mind how I feel about the accommodations here.  They aren’t really bad enough to be worth complaining about (compared to some countries, I’m sure these residences are wonderful) but they do still leave a lot to be desired.  The worst part in my mind is the showers.  They at least have hot water, which is more than I can say for the ones in Senegal, but they operate almost the same way as those sinks where you push a button on top and it takes about 10 seconds for the button to work its way back to the top, at which point the water shuts off.  The shower’s button probably lasts closer to 30 seconds, but it is still ridiculously annoying to have to be pushing a button a couple of times a minute just to keep the water flowing.  The “kitchen” that we were promised is also a disappointment, as we are merely given a fridge in each of our rooms, and then a microwave and sink that is shared by the entire floor.  From what I have heard from the other European students here, France is actually renowned for having really poor residence halls for its university students.  I suppose this is what happens when the students aren’t being forced to pay thousands of dollars for their education.  Still, I suppose it is nice to have our own space.  I would definitely prefer crummy residence halls to being in another homestay for the entire semester.  It will be interesting to see if the internet connection stays up this time.  The reason that it took me such a long time to start posting in the blog again is that we are not allowed Wi-Fi in the residence hall, so I had to bring my computer onto the campus to re-download the Ethernet driver for my computer, which was apparently never properly installed.  I managed to get this task accomplished just in time to have the entire residence’s internet crash.  Thankfully, it only took them four days to fix the internet, rather than the week we were originally quoted.  We all do find it rather annoying though, as the residence that we are staying in is solely for international students, so they are aware that everyone in the dorm is reliant on the internet in order to stay in touch with their friends and family back home.  We’ve tried going out to cafés and such to find Wi-Fi, but so far the only place in town we’ve been able to find with a reliable connection has been McDonald’s.  Hopefully this time the internet will stay up, but I’m afraid I can’t promise anything.  Since I am staying in the International Residence, there is quite a mix of students who are in the hall with me.  The majority seem to be Japanese, since I think there was a large school group which all came together.  I have also met students from New Zealand, Tunisia, England, Germany, Poland, Palestine and Brazil.  Those with common languages do tend to drift together, since it is nice to speak in our own tongue during our downtime, so I have been spending a lot of time with the girls from England.  We also tend to eat lunch with the Germans, since they have a fairly good grasp of English.

Dublin