Foreign students in Turkey share their experiences
- World
- Anadolu Agency
- Published Date: 12:00 | 09 May 2018
- Modified Date: 12:34 | 09 May 2018
Foreign students studying in Turkey under the EU's Erasmus+ program shared their views on how the program help them shape their perspective on life and their host county.
Erasmus was founded in 1987 as a European Union student exchange program and later turned into Erasmus+, which is a program to support education, training, youth, and sport in Europe. Turkey has been a member of the program since 2003.
Isabelle Heineman, a 23-year-old student from London, is one of the thousands of students studying in Turkey under the Erasmus+ program. Heineman is enrolled in the year-long Erasmus exchange program at Istanbul's Boğaziçi University.
"I am studying political science and history. I am studying at the history department [...] with special focus on the Ottoman-Byzantine encounter in the 15th century," she told Anadolu Agency after a press meeting organized by Turkish Ministry for EU Affairs to raise awareness about Erasmus program.
"The education at Boğaziçi University has really been exceptional," she added.
"This was a great opportunity and for me, I don't quite know whether I will continue my studies in history or political science, but in either way what I have been doing here will certainly be informative experience," she said.
She also noted the hospitality of the Turkish people. "Readiness of people to help each other and the sort of being a community," are the other aspects of living in Turkey, Heineman said.
"So this is something we in London could certainly learn from," she added.
On Tuesday, Turkish EU Ministry Undersecretary Selim Yenel told Anadolu Agency that despite strain ties between Ankara and the EU, Turkey will benefit even more from the bloc's Erasmus student scheme as its funding has recently been doubled.
On May 2, the European Union announced its proposal for the 2021-2027 budget, under which its youth program funding has been increased by more than double, reaching €30 billion ($36 billion).
Yenel noted that most of the students that came to Turkey were from Germany.
- DIFFERENT CULTURES
Rafael Seybold is a student from Germany who is enrolled at Istanbul Technical University (ITU) in the master program of mechanical engineering.
The 24-year-old student believes "being in a different country always opens up your mind a little more to know other cultures".
"It makes you see the differences. Especially in Turkey, I feel like I see more relaxed lifestyle […] and being in a city like Istanbul, which is 30 times bigger than the city I grew up in, opens up your mind about the life in the big city," he added.
According to Seybold, the university life in Germany and Turkey is quite different.
"I used to study in huge lecture halls maybe with 400 other students [...] But, here in Turkey at ITU you sit with maybe just 10 to 20 people in the room and you are really close to professors.
"Also there are a lot of projects going on. So you feel like I am more involved with my studies than I have ever been in Germany," he added.
Erika Grubyte, a 25-year-old Lithuanian, came to Turkey under the Erasmus program around four years ago and now she is back this time to join a volunteering project by Turkish Red Crescent in the central Anatolian province of Eskisehir, where she teaches English and art to refugee children.
"When I came here [...] I started comparing my country with the people here [in Turkey], who are open and helpful," she told Anadolu Agency.
"Whenever people in Lithuania ask me, Erika, why are you taking care of everybody, I say there are some people in Turkey who taught me all these things," she said.
"Now I came back under this EVS [European Voluntary Service] project where I teach English and arts to refugee children. In this way, I am giving back everything that Turkey taught me," Erika added.