Monday, November 6, 2017

Diverse Sources - Interviews



Name: Ryan Tiemann
Age: 22
Gender: Male
Major: Ad/Mass Communication
Occupation: Retail
Class: Low
Race/ethnicity: Caucasian
Geography: Lewisville, TX
  1. No
  2. N/A
  3. “Mostly because I feel like I don’t have enough experience just yet in a class setting. I need to get a little more before I seriously consider doing that.”
  4. “I don’t really know. I don’t really have any internship experience. Right now, Mass Comm Week has been doing pretty well with getting people networked.”
  5. “Well first off, it’s good networking, it gets people involved in talking to people that are already in the business. It gets those contacts early on, and that’s very important with a lot of careers.”
  6. “A lot of times you’re not getting paid for an internship, so it’s taking time out of the day that could be used for education as well as work.”   
 


Name: Mitchell Oden
Age: 22
Gender: Male
Major: Theater, emphasis on performance & production
Occupation: student
Class: Low
Race/ethnicity: Caucasian
Geography: Richardson, TX

  1. “No”
  2. N/A
  3. “Well, the one I had gotten close to doing was the Shakespeare study abroad one, but it takes place in the summer and I’m graduating in the spring. It’s really expensive too, and I wouldn’t have financial aid with that.”
  4. “I would say advertising because I just barely got a glimpse of it, and if i had known about it earlier, I probably would’ve easily done it.”
  5. “Again, referring to the Shakespeare one, just being there. It’s one thing to just hear about Shakespeare, learn about it and get it talked to your face. But actually being there, getting involved with our hands on, I think is something incredible. It’s a once in a lifetime experience.”
  6. “The cost. That was for me. The time constraint. Not enough of them?



Name: Jackson Kimbrough
Age: 23
Gender:Male
Major: Chemistry
Occupation: Student
Class: Low
Race/ethnicity: Caucasian
Geography: Portland, TX
EMail: jlk157@txstate.edu
  1.  “No, I have never done that."
  2. N/A 
  3.  “I guess mostly because I’m kind of lazy, so that’s mostly on me. And I’m also kind of intimidated by going somewhere unfamiliar, being away from what I’m used to. And also potentially it being expensive. So there’s a lot of things that factor in to kind of pushing me away from trying it.” 
  4.  “I feel like probably the biggest one, at least for me, would be cost. But then, I don’t know what can be done to make that more affordable. But I think that’s probably a big one.” 
  5.  “I think they’re actually really nice. You get out there, you get to see how the world works, you get real world experience, you get hands on, you can network yourself, and you can really get a grasp and a feel for how things really work. Instead of just being behind a desk doing school work, you get to get out and see it for yourself.” 
  6.  “I feel like a downside would be like being somewhere new, like over in Europe, I feel like it would be really easy to get caught up in being somewhere new, and being somewhere different, and just focusing on the place that you’re at, rather than sitting down and actually doing the work you went there to do. So I feel like that might get in the way, of doing the study abroad. Actually being there and getting distracted.”

Thursday, November 2, 2017


Texas State Students: What They Think About the Study Abroad Program
By Haley Peters
hjp27@txstate.edu

SAN MAROS, Texas— On Tuesday, October 24, Texas Sate students said what they think about the accessibility and safety of the University's Study Abroad program.


Texas State University creates an opportunity for students to participate in alternative learning— learning outside the classroom, and for the most part, outside of the country as well. The Study Abroad Office states that their mission is to provide a "safe, accessible, academically rigorous, geographically diverse, and a culturally enriching global educational experience to our students". However, while interest remains high in the program, many students believe that the Study Abroad program provokes accessibility and safety issues.

Kathia Avilez
Taken by: Ashley Brown

While students have interest in the Study Abroad program at Texas State University, many students agreed as a whole that the opportunity is expensive. Kathy Avilez, a Senior at Texas State, comments that even if it was affordable, there are still rigorous requirements in getting into the program.



 "I think the downside would be the requirements maybe. The competition is pretty fierce. And so maybe people don't apply because they're scared they're not going to get accepted," Avilez said.


Sydney Hewlett, a sophomore at Texas State, offered solutions of what could make the program more accessible to students. 
Sydney Hewlett
Taken By: Haley Peters

 


"Offer like a scholarship kind of thing. Like, a contest to see if they could, like, win a free trip after they give a card," Hewlett said. 


Once you have made it into the program, everything is fine and dandy, right? Not necessarily. Many students agreed on potential safety hazards. Odalys Delgado expresses her insight on what makes being in a completely new place tricky. 



Odalys Delgado
Taken By: Michael Imo





"Not knowing your way around," Delgado said.



Not only does not knowing your way around becomes a cause of hazard for traveling abroad, but specifics on other countries restrict the level of self-defense. Chauncey Ling-Miller shares his knowledge on foreign law.







Chauncey Ling-Miller
Taken By: John McCabe



"My family in Germany says that their are a to of security problems over there. Theres no concealed or open carry," Ling-Miller said.



Overall, students were at a common consensus that traveling overseas currently can potentially be dangerous. Allison Manning, a freshman at Texas State, sums up her feelings about the protection of the program.


Allison Manning
Taken By: John McCabe

"I feel like the only downside is you can never guarantee security I feel like thats why a lot of people don't study abroad," Allison said.




However, Sophomore Hunter Archield-Cupit, who participated in the study abroad trip in Barcelona, Spain, has a different view on the program's protection. 
Hunter Archield-Cupit
Taken By: John McCabe




"You get to leave home and explore the world while being in a safe space, which I think is a cool thing for people to do.You get to experience different culture," Archield-Cupit said.














For more information on the Study Abroad program and what measures they take to stay safe, click here.