Amalija Laslo attends George Fox
University in Oregon. Her major
International Relations with a minor in Peace Studies, Sociology has a lot to
do with where she is from. “I’m from
Serbia from Eastern Europe and I come from a conflict region. My country was affected in the past with a
lot of conflict and a lot of civil wars and once what was former Yugoslavia
because of civil war it separated into so many different regions,” she
says.
“After doing research, I realized
that this major International Relations with Peace Studies and Sociology helps
me a lot to learn about this communication and relation between different
cultures, or different religion and how there are ways that even though
different still it is possible to communicate and not only communicate, but to
communicate effectively.”
This is Amalija second year at the
university. The 27-year-old
says some of her personal experiences as well as
academic experiences at the university have developed her overall as a
student. “Being a student at George Fox
helps me a lot in growing as a person, learning of how I relate to different
things and different ways and at times it can be very challenging because I feel
very, very lonely and it is because I am the only student from Europe. All of the rest of the international
students are from Asia, so I’m really the minority at George Fox University,
but now as I look back on last year I can see a huge improvement on how I
relate to others and how others relate to me,” she says.
“Education here is not something
abstract. It is very personal, very
practical. Education at least here at
George Fox it is connected to textbooks and grades, but it is something we can
apply not only in our work afterwards, but also in our lives and what I find
very different from my country is the way professors invest in the students,”
she says.
“I’m highly surprised and I admire
their readiness to help out students and invest their time and invest their
resources and help students to bring there best and this is something very
different. Relationship professors have
with their students, it is so much more higher level than in my country.”
Amalija says she isn't too involved
with campus activities because her work and her studies take up most of her
time. “I do have work on campus. I work for Center for Peace and Justice and
for Global Studies Center and this is something that I do,” she says. “It’s again
Connected to school, but its in a
way also separate because my work in a way is different than my studies, but I
would say that my work and my studies at the moment are taking most of my
time.”
While going to school at George
Fox, Amalija is living with a host family which she says has been very
supportive and has made her feel like she is part of the family. “This is the first time I had the experience
to live with a host family and they are a wonderful family and
they consider me honestly and
really as being apart of their family and I do consider them as being my new
family and their help and their support, when I say this I am not exaggerating
help me to come so far. Without their
help I don’t think I could have help made it thru my first year,” she says.
“They were my support in anything
that I can remember and think of and I am very, very thankful for them. They are a wonderful family.”
Graduation for Amalija is in 2011,
however when she finishes she is focused on the next phase of her life. “I want to do one year internship in Ireland
and hopefully if I can get an internship over there, then after that I would
like to go and work in the region that I come from. Not necessary Serbia, but maybe Croatia or Bosnia, but it has to
be Balkan region.”
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