Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Student living in Italy for a year - Fluency wanted, course options.

Student living in Italy for a year - Fluency wanted, course options.?
I need a little help. I'm a UK resident, in my second last year of school and looking at my future. I want to live in Italy for one year, predominantly to learn the language. Can anyone suggest options for me? Where I can go, what can I do? I'm interested in Immersion programmes for the language, but I would like to mix with other students (preferably my age, which will be 18/19 at the time). I'm just lost. Thanks for any help.
Studying Abroad - 1 Answers
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1 :
The best thing you can do is to translate this question in Italian and post it on it.answers.yahoo.com, where many Italians will hurry to answer to you. I can just say two things: * There are students exchange programs both at high school level and at university level. Ask at your school in UK. * There is an Italian university that is specialized in enrolling foreign students, at Perugia: http://www.unistrapg.it/english/



Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Can someone help me find a college program in florence italy for US students

Can someone help me find a college program in florence italy for US students?
I am graduating highschool next year and i just came back from a month in italy. I cant even tell you ho much i am in love with the place. I wanna study in florence different languages, the arts, political sciences and what not. I wanna find a website that explains everything. Like a package deal on a full year with room and board, tuition and everything. If you have been to florence for college or just in italy in general for school i would love to hear your experience.
Studying Abroad - 1 Answers
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1 :
I listed some links below. The third link has 129 programs in Florence alone! I know that Georgetown U also has a program there in Fiesole and Middlebury has a program. I studied for one year as an auditing student at the Università Statale di Milan. I got no credit for it but as an auditing student, tuition was less than $10 per semester for me and I was allowed to sit in and paricipate in any class I wanted. I ended up spending 7 years total in Italy and loved it. Now I am a translator from different languages into English. Good luck, you will ave a great year!!!



Monday, August 24, 2009

How do I find a family to live with in Spain or Italy if I am already in Europe

How do I find a family to live with in Spain or Italy if I am already in Europe?
I arrived in Spain mid-July and have been studying Spanish at a language institute. I am not really fond of the location, and have a plane ticket in December to return to the US. I am traveling around Europe for the next 3 weeks and then my schedule is completely open. I have some ideas, like working for a family, or language school, or teaching English (I am certified and I have a degree), or meeting my husband and gaining citizenship, but I am really not sure what the heck to do. For that matter, I am not sure if I am aloud to stay that long . . . but I am going to. Any advice?
Other - Europe - 1 Answers
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Ordinary travel visa for US is good for 90 days. If you overstay that, or take a job, then you need a working visa. To find a family to live with, the best way I know of is to have an exchange seet up in advance.



Sunday, August 16, 2009

First day of school months

First day of school months?
What month are the first day of school in Belgium, Luxembourg and Italy?
Other - Europe - 1 Answers
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1 :
usually schools start toward the end of september or the first week of october



Saturday, August 8, 2009

As an adult 40 years old, how can I stay in Italy to learn culture and language for few months

As an adult 40 years old, how can I stay in Italy to learn culture and language for few months?
If you were a student, I know I could have been an exchange student like I did when I was back in High school and went to Japan for one year.... But now I am 40 and want to go study Italian culture, language, etc, etc...
Other - Italy - 4 Answers
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1 :
u dont have to go to italy. just take classes from a professional, or someone you know who is pure italian. arrivederci! (that means bye)
2 :
all it takes is money and a passport
3 :
It depends on where you're from, but you might be able to visit as a tourist for up to 90 days without a visa. You can check the requirements for your nationality and residence at: http://www.esteri.it/visti/index_eng.asp You could also enrol in a school here and go for a student visa. Generally as a student, you would need to demonstrate that you have adequate funds for your stay here. Note that unless you're from the EU, you can't legally work here without the proper visa that allows it and a permesso di soggiorno that allows you to reside in Italy for the purpose of work.
4 :
money or a job



Saturday, August 1, 2009

How to convert grades from Italy to grades in the US

How to convert grades from Italy to grades in the US?
I recently spent some time abroad in Italy, and went to school and got grades in most subjects. However, their grading system is a bit different than ours, being based in a 10-point scale, and I am having trouble converting it back to grades in the US. I got an 8 out of 10 in 2 subjects, and I thought that that grade would transfer to be more of a low A than a low B. Does anyone know how to convert grades on a 10-point scale to ours, and it's not by just adding a 0. There is a formula, I just don't know it and can't find it.
Other - Education - 1 Answers
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There are organizations which convert grades and transcripts professionally. I think an easy way to find one is to visit the district offices of the school district where you live and ask how they handle the transcripts of students transferring in from a foreign school. Someone there will certainly know the name of the organization to which the transcripts are sent for translation. (The translation also includes interpreting the foreign grading system into what is appropriate where you are.)



Friday, July 24, 2009

Do you attend a private or a public school

Do you attend a private or a public school?
I live in Italy and I would like to know what are the differences between private and public schools in America. I attended private schools and here the differences are that private schools are mostly owned by catholics (but I attended laic ones), you have to wear uniforms and they sound very prestigious (in fact they are, because there are some public schools where teachers know less than students, although many public schools are as prestigious as public ones) I also would like to know why a lot of people in America are homeschooled. In Italy you must attend school, it's a law. Thanks!
Primary & Secondary Education - 8 Answers
Random Answers, Critics, Comments, Opinions :
1 :
idk but i go to public school
2 :
It is also mandatory to attend school here in the U.S. Homeschooling is considered 'attending' school. I go to a public school, unfortunately, because my family can't afford to whisk me away to a private school. I have friends who are home schooled and it's because their parents are extremely overprotective. There are other reasons, though :P
3 :
I go to a private catholic high school, although i went to public school through 8th grade. we wear uniforms, and it's a lot smaller than public school, but other than that there's not much difference. kids in America are home schooled for a lot of different reasons, but it is considered attending school (also the law).
4 :
Things vary from school to school here, but usually public schools are much bigger than private schools. Also, not too many public schools here use uniforms. Why do we get homeschooled? Well, it varies from family to family but one of the main reasons is that parents are unhappy with the education their kids are getting from schools. Another reason is to just be a closer family. Sometimes the parents were homeschooled, so they homeschool their kids in turn. If you are homeschooled, it is technically "going to school" but the parents have control about how their kids learn. I hope this helps! MCC
5 :
I go to Public School
6 :
i go to public school and we dont have to wear uniforms....nd yea i dont think the teachers are catholics....but i am lolz
7 :
Public. i think homeschooling here in the U.S is still attending school.
8 :
There are different methods of education in America. 1.PUBLIC SCHOOL. This is a school that is open to every one, and also free. The supplies and other things are paid out of tax dollars. 2.PRIVATE SCHOOL. This is a privately owned school that does not get it’s funding out of tax dollars. It usually gets it’s money out of tuition, and/or funding through bake sales, etc. the reason there are private schools maybe religious, but it also maybe just wanting to teach more hands on, or through a different teaching method. 3.MONTISORRI EDUCATION AND WALDORF EDUCATION. I do not know that much about Montessori, and for Waldorf I know, but was not confidant in explaining, so I copied and pasted each from Wikipedia: MONTISORRI: The Montessori method is a child-centered, alternative educational method based on the child development theories originated by Italian educator Maria Montessori (1870–1952) in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Primarily applied in preschool and elementary school settings (and occasionally in infant, toddler, middle school, and high school), [1][2] its method of education is characterized by emphasizing self-directed activity, on the part of the child, and clinical observation, on the part of the teacher (often called a director, directress, guide) — to stress the importance of adapting the child’s learning environment to his or her development level, and the role of physical activity in the child’s absorbing abstract concepts and learning practical skills. Auto-didactic (self-correcting) equipment is used for introducing and learning concepts, and reading is taught via phonics and whole language, the comparative benefits of which are presently being recognized.[3] The Montessori name is famous, but not a trademark, and it is associated with more than one organization. There are schools “influenced by Montessori” bearing little resemblance, and which have received substantive criticism from schools with a closer lineage to Montessori’s work.[4] This article is about Dr. Maria Montessori’s work, that of her colleagues and successors. WALDORF: Waldorf education is a pedagogy based upon the educational philosophy of the Austrian philosopher Rudolf Steiner, the founder of anthroposophy. Learning is interdisciplinary, integrating practical, artistic, and conceptual elements.[1] The Waldorf approach emphasizes the role of the imagination,[2][3][4] developing thinking that includes a creative as well as an analytic component.[5][6] The overarching goals of this educational approach are to provide young people the basis on which to develop into free, moral[7][8] and integrated individuals,[2][9][10] and to help every child fulfill his or her unique destiny, the existence of which anthroposophy posits.[11][12] Schools and teachers are given considerable freedom to define curricula within collegial structures.[13] The first Waldorf school was founded in 1919 to serve the children of employees at the Waldorf-Astoria cigarette factory in Stuttgart. There are 994[14][15] independent Waldorf schools and in 2001 had "1400 kindergartens 120 special remedial institutions, 68 social and teacher training institutions in Europe, South America, Africa and Asia"[16] located in approximately sixty countries throughout the world.[15] There are also Waldorf-based public and Charter schools, homeschooling environments,[2] and schools for special education, and Waldorf ideas are being reproduced, often less in whole than in part, in an expanding number of American public and private schools today.[17][18] The educational approach is known in some countries as Steiner or Steiner-Waldorf education. 4.HOMESCHOOLING. Homeschooling can be for religious reasons, or simply (for the reason I did) not liking the public schools mode for teaching and the whole “mainstream” aspect of it. Homeschooling is now(YES!!!) legal in all states, but each state has different laws. Most homeschoolers are required to take more tests than public scholars, and maybe visited by someone to make sure your studying all the subjects and whatnot. 5.UNSCHOOLING. Unschooling, which not many people realize, is in fact different from homeschooling. “Unschooling” is where you study based on the scholar’s interests, and is generally way more loose than homeschooling. Again, unschoolers have to go by their states laws just like homeschoolers-the only difference between the two is teaching method. Both are done at home.