Learning, growing and adapting

Ratings
Overall
4
Growth: 5
Support: 3
Fun: 4
Housing: 2
Safety: 4
Review

China is an amazing country, full of beautiful, humble and really nice people. They always make sure you feel part of the family. I did my exchange in a Highschool in Jiu Jiang City. During this time I lived with a chinese family and was a regular student.

I'll try to organize my experience the best I can:

AFS-China: Everything gets ready in your home country. Every student who is about to make the same exchange program as you arrives on the same date. With that you start the introduction, they explain the rules and prepare you to leave the next day to the city where you're going to stay. From this time on, the school es the one in charge of whatever happens to you. Normally AFS' work is to make sure you have a nice transition when introduce into the culture. They do this by giving each student a contact person. In China things work differently, they don't give any contact person, when I was there my only contact person was my teacher, and he wasn't available always and didn't have much time. This was something that other students experience as well. Another thing is that in my case in particular I had problems with my first family, and was left homeless for around two months, during this time AFS was suppose to help me out and work on finding me a family as soon as possible, but they didn't or it didn't feel like it. Instead they contacted the school, and ask them to find me a family, and during this time my school had a "foreigners apartment" where I stayed.
Life in China: living in China is a mixture of feelings, everything is as weird as you can expect and a bit more, but its also magical. China has one of the best cuisines I have ever tried, and you should be very open minded to enjoy everything. I must admit that the first shock you receive is the cultural difference, and AFS tries to explain that this is going to happen during it's training, but you can never imagine what it really feels like.

Language barrier was one of the biggest problems, if not the biggest. The percentage of people who speaks english is really really low, and chinese is a hard language to begin with, without any basis it takes a long time to start understanding and speaking, but once you start to understand chinese just get easier and easier.

Traveling: It's hard to travel alone with AFS, they have certain rules you have to fulfill in order to accept your request. It's hard to get all the requests ready, but it's completely worth it. Traveling in China is an amazing experience, I would go as for as to say it's the best experience of all.

School life in China: This varies a lot from city to city. In my case I was in Jiu Jiang (九江市 ). For me this meant I have to attend class like any other student my age (16 at the time). My schedule was starting from 7 am till 12 for 2 hours of lunch, then begin the afternoon from 14h until 19h for one hour break for dinner, and finally from 20h until 22h to go home. This everyday from Monday to Saturday. Yep, you read that well, 6 days a week of school, all day. It was exhausting, I stopped going to the night classes because I was doing nothing there. After some time I started to go in the afternoon to play outside with some friends. School expected nothing from me, everything was in chinese so I couldn't do much, and the worst was that all my classmates were always at school, so I couldn't make friends, and even if I do no one could speak with me, nor they could help me because no one had time. That's the most frustrating part, specially if you want to interact with chinese people. The good part is that you are not alone, you and all the other foreigners become one huge family to help each other survive and make the experience unique. That's not good if you're looking to learn the language as best as possible and to live the culture to the fullest, but it's part of the experience never the less.

Would you recommend this program?
Yes, I would
Year Completed
2011