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In today's episode of Study abroad we talked to Virginia.
She came to Slovenia to, among other things, learn the language better and to find some of her relatives. Her family moved from Slovenia to Argentina in 1939. While she does like it here, she misses Sunday barbecues with her family called Asado and "mate" –an invigorating drink that is very popular in her home country.
Her music choice was a national rock song by Charly García titled "Nos siguen pegando abajo" ("They keep hitting us down there").
205 epizod
We take a peek into the lives of foreign students living in Slovenia. Did they come to party, study or just shake up their everyday lives? What makes these young people tick and what do they think about the country they've come to? Listen to the challenges they face and what they miss from home. Has this experience changed them? Are they considering staying here? Every Monday at 11:25 only on Radio Si. Do you want to share your experience? Just write to pr@radiosi.eu and maybe you are our next guest.
In today's episode of Study abroad we talked to Virginia.
She came to Slovenia to, among other things, learn the language better and to find some of her relatives. Her family moved from Slovenia to Argentina in 1939. While she does like it here, she misses Sunday barbecues with her family called Asado and "mate" –an invigorating drink that is very popular in her home country.
Her music choice was a national rock song by Charly García titled "Nos siguen pegando abajo" ("They keep hitting us down there").
Pedro Nuno Ramoš comes from a small town in Portugal, who decided not just to study, but also work in Ljubljana. Believe it or not, one of the steriotypes he heard about Slovenians is, that they're agressive drivers. He says it wasn't hard to get used to Slovenia, since the people are not so different from the Portugese. He did, however, note that Slovenians respect rules more than in Portugal, especially when it comes to crossing the street.
Meet Na Pan. She's is a literary theory student from China that's been in Slovenia for almost 10 months. She doesn't consider herself the stereotypical Erasmus student, since she spends a good amount of her time on studies. Na Pan says the study program in Slovenia is less strict than in China, but that that doesn't mean the quality is any lower, it just means that she is allowed more creative freedom.
Paul is an Englishman who came to Slovenia for love, but decided to stay and is now a student in Ljubljana.
We take a peek into the lives of foreign students living in Slovenia. Did they come to party, study or just shake up their everyday lives? What makes these young people tick and what do they think about the country they've come to? Listen to the challenges they face and what they miss from home. Has this experience changed them? Are they considering staying here? Every Monday at 11:25 only on Radio Si. Do you want to share your experience? Just write to pr@radiosi.eu and maybe you are our next guest.
We take a peek into the lives of foreign students living in Slovenia. Did they come to party, study or just shake up their everyday lives? What makes these young people tick and what do they think about the country they've come to? Listen to the challenges they face and what they miss from home. Has this experience changed them? Are they considering staying here? Every Monday at 11:25 only on Radio Si. Do you want to share your experience? Just write to pr@radiosi.eu and maybe you are our next guest.
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