I just took my AP Art History exam this morning, so that's where my brain is. And so I felt the need to include a famous Gauguin painting in this post's title. Alright, that's my lead in.
As promised in my first post, (I suggest reading this blog from the beginning,) here's a brief introduction to me and why I chose to study in India out of all those exotic places listed down below. Mera naam Erik hai (one of about three Hindi sentences I know so far), and I'm a current Junior from Massachusetts. My life at the moment is studying for the four AP exams I'm taking but I promise I do more than that. I do tons of theater at my high school and a local theater company, I have some really awesome friends and family that I'm going to miss a lot, and I'm an outgoing introvert.
Where Are We Going? To Pune, India! My reasons for choosing India/studying abroad in general are a bit complex, but I'll try to explain. Here's why, in a semi-order:
- I love traveling. Obsessed. Don't know why. I love maps, learning languages, and going on airplanes. I went to the state Geography Bee in sixth grade (nerd). I plan on majoring in geography and/or urban studies.
- India has a ton of people in cities and a lot of problems. I figured that's a good place for someone interested in geography/urban studies to start.
- I love my home--this is not a trip to get away from family. At the same time, I want to meet new people and visit new places. There is more to life than Whitepeopletown, MA.
- Learning Hindi is going to be hopefully very useful. At the moment I speak English, a limited amount of French, and I took one year of Latin (and hated it). But Hindi, unlike Latin, is useful! And I just think it's so neat to speak another language, and was always fascinated when my family members would. Also, I don't want to be the typical monolingual American.
- I've always been interested in Indian culture, although by no means would I say I know a lot. But I'm learning. I STILL have never seen a Bollywood movie. If you have a favorite, leave it in comments below so I can watch it!
- The food is rather scrumptious.
- I want to study abroad in college again. Also, this is to test the waters a bit--do I definitely want to travel for a living and study geography?
- It's going to look awesome on a college resume.
- I'm extremely excited to meet my other American buddies as well as Indians. New friends. Yipee!
- This is a dumb reason but I'm looking forward to the New York City pre-departure orientation and looking out the window of the airplane and seeing the entire world below me. I think because I can actually imagine myself doing that, and I know what it will be like, unlike India.
- Where else could I go? I have no legitimate reason to go to Tajikistan. I'm mad at Russia. I don't speak Chinese and other people are already learning Mandarin, so they can have that one. The Middle East was off limits because I have worried parents and I'm sort of Jewish. South Korea was definitely cool and acceptable, as was Turkey. But India seemed like the best bet.
I'm also going to explain a bit about the application process. I filled out my initial application in the fall. If you think you might just apply but don't care too much about it, don't. The application is long, you need to write essays and get teacher recommendations and fill in a whole lot of information about yourself. I would recommend a teacher that can not only speak to your abilities, but also to your personality. So that initial step takes place during the fall and was due on November 5. I found out that I was a Semi-Finalist on December 11, which was one of the best days of my life. I found out I was a Finalist (in other words, I got the scholarship) on February 28, which probably was the actual best day of my life. The order in which news comes out varies from year to year--for mine Hindi was one of the first, and Chinese the last. Also, sometimes news comes out by state. Or region. But sometimes not. So don't worry about that, you'll find out when you find out. However, it is true that good news comes sooner than bad news.
Application Tip #1: Make sure you want to do this. Really stop to think about what your life might be like if you get it and go. Are you ready? (pause for moment of introspection.) If so, continue on.
Application Tip #2: Don't procrastinate! I actually did, if I remember correctly, and barely got it in on time because of too many people on the website at once. Don't let that be you. Read over all of your application carefully. If you do a rush job, they'll notice, and besides, you can't. It's too long.
Application Tip #3: Don't think that you'll get it the first time. That gets rid of the disappointment and only leads to a happy surprise if you get it. Trust me. The first time I applied, I thought I had a very good chance and was devastated when I found out I didn't get to be even a semi-finalist. The second time, I tried (and somewhat succeeded) at not even thinking about it. And it worked!
Application Tip #4: I'm not going to say exactly what I wrote in my essays or talked about, but I'll give some advice since you're taking the time to read this, so you're probably dedicated. Show them that you want to go to learn the language. If you imply that you just want to go to the country because you're interested in its culture or whatever, my limited experience has shown that you won't get it. And I'm telling you this because if you aren't interested in the language aspect as much, I wouldn't recommend going: language classes are going to be four to five hours everyday, five days per week.
Application Tip #5: I know you always hear this, but at the interview and in your essays, BE YOURSELF. Don't try to be the person you think they want to see. If you're relaxed and friendly, they'll know that you can handle being alone in a foreign country.
Application Tip #6: Thank your interviewers if you're a semi-finalist. They are volunteers. As in, they aren't paid. Meaning, they're doing it because they are wonderful people. I had two lovely elderly ladies interviewing me.
Application Tip #7: Prepare answers for questions they might ask. One that I had trouble with was describing a struggle I had gone through.
Application Tip #8: Start learning Hindi/whatever language before your interview! I had learned the Devanagari alphabet so I could say that I had begun learning.
Application Tip #9: Don't apply to a certain country because you think you are more likely to get in. I've heard multiple times that a proportionate number of people apply to each program, so the programs with the most students (China and South Korea) have a larger number of applicants than the smaller programs (Turkey and Tajikistan). If I remember correctly from my year, you have an approximately 15% chance if you apply, and a 50% chance if you get to be a semi-finalist.
Application Tip #10: Join the Facebook group! For some reason, the "NSLI-Y applicants 2012-2013" page has over 1000 members, while the "NSLI-Y applicants 2013-2014" page has just 200. I would recommend joining the 2012-2013 one as well as the current one for you, because that seems to be where a lot of the action takes place.
Thanks for reading, and best of luck!
Thanks for reading, and best of luck!
I love your blog! I can't wait to hear more about your thoughts about this whole process and then your actual experiences!
ReplyDelete"Whitepeopletown, MA" - Erik you're my favorite.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I feel like we might be the same exact person because of our connection with traveling/airplanes/geography/outgoing introversion/etc. Anyway, this blog is great and I hope you have the time of your life with this new experience :). Can't wait for you to come back to us with all of your stories about your Indian adventures!!
You are quite amazing, Erik, and I can't wait to give you a welcome-back-hug in August. Stop by Jackson Heights on your way home and we can go have some - drum roll, wait for it - Indian Food! xoxo Gail
ReplyDelete