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Applying to colleges in the west can be a daunting
task. Students have to fill out separate applications, complete
with innovative essays and personal statements, while ensuring their
teachers send out good recommendations to the admissions board.
Competition for places is intense, and with most universities now
looking for all-rounders, school students need to supplement decent
exam scores with internships, extra-curricular activities and community
service. And set aside substantial finances to pay for it all.
Sounds overwhelming? Getting to college
can be. Newsline talks to students, who have already been there,
done that - and have their university T-shirt to prove it! Why did
they decide to study abroad, given the xenophobia prevalent in the
post 9/11 western world? What did it take to make it there? And
finally, given the time and finances a university education absorbs,
is returning to Pakistan a credible option?
Flying
hundreds and thousands of miles, landing in a strange country and
living as an 'alien' in a foreign land for four years is not easy.
Post-9/11, it has become even more difficult, especially for students
from Muslim countries.
Obtaining
a visa is, more often than not, an ordeal in itself. Then there
is the harassment foreigners suffer at immigration desks upon arrival,
where almost every person with brown skin is considered a "suspect,"
and stopped for "random" security checks. Paradoxically
perhaps, more Pakistani students are studying abroad now than ever
before.
This
outflow of aspiring university students can partly be explained
due to the lack of credible educational options in Pakistan. While
medical, business and art schools abound, quality liberal arts colleges
are practically non-existent. Many students also fear that Pakistani
universities are not always recognised abroad. "My choosing
to go abroad was based on a simple rationale: did I want a credible
degree in four years or a piece of paper that I would have to verify
and explain wherever I went in the world," explains Sumaira
Dharani, a first-year commerce major at the University of Toronto,
Canada.
Political
and social instability in Pakistan also discourages many students
from seeking educational qualifications in their own country. "It's
hard to speak your mind as a professor in Pakistan. You get more
opposing viewpoints abroad," says Ragni Kidwai, a sophomore
at Hampshire College, Massachusetts. "A foreign degree also
counts for more when you are applying for jobs," says Babar
Asif, a graduate from the University of Arkansas, who did his Masters
in marketing and is currently working in the US.
Universities
abroad have greater resources at their disposal and are able to
assist students in procuring internships and and even jobs after
graduation. They also invite guest lecturers, have theatrical performances
and provide better opportunities for students to explore their creative
energies.
The process of applying from Pakistan, however, is fraught
with complications and involves thousands of decisions. The most
pressing of these is the issue of financial aid. Many American universities
do not offer grants on a need-blind basis. Tuition plus room-and-board
at top universities in the US can cost up to 40,000 dollars a year
- an expensive undertaking for most. For many students, the choice
of college is based on which one offers the best financial aid package.
Most Pakistani students rely on scholarships that pay for tuition.
Nazia Mansoor, who wanted to study in the US, says she didn't gain
admission in most of her top choice colleges because she applied
for substantial aid. "People who didn't ask for that much aid
got in, even though my grades were better," she recalls. (Mansoor
currently studies at Sussex University in the UK). Some students
like Abbas Reza, a senior studying computer and information sciences
at Minnesota State University, engage in part-time jobs to fund
their education. "The odd jobs are an experience that all expats
should seek. It really puts things in perspective and you come to
appreciate the value of the dollar."
In
contrast to the US, Canadian universities do not provide international
students with much financial aid, and whatever is available is very
limited. But whereas small private colleges in the US tend to grant
more aid, they are not need-blind, with merit-based scholarships
remaining highly competitive.
Deciding which university to apply to can be quite difficult for
the average Pakistani high school student. While students abroad
have the advantage of professional counselling, coupled with visits
to potential college campuses where they can meet with enrolled
students and sit through college level classes, these options are
not readily available to their Pakistani counterparts. Advice here
is usually limited to the more well-known, first-tier schools. Many
students, who are unable to pay the hefty fees this entails, remain
unaware of opportunities for better financial aid packages that
lesser-known colleges provide.
Though
students receive some form of college counselling here, most students
agree that effective guidance is hard to come by. Saba Baxamoosa,
who studied at Karachi Grammar School, found herself to be simply
a "name on a list," and found her guidance counsellor
to be completely unhelpful. Only those lucky enough to have family
and friends living abroad can be helped effectively with their college
search.
A few students complain that their high schools did not
prepare them sufficiently for college. "My school did not provide
me with a good base as far as academics are concerned," says
Dharani. The difficulty in adapting to a university curriculum in
the US often stems from the fact that the British style of learning,
which most Pakistani schools are based on, is completely different
from that of the US. Says Kidwai, "At Pakistani high schools,
we don't write analytical papers, nor are we taught to write substantive
essays. High school only taught me how to write a half-decent answer
in 20 minutes."
Relationships, both social and with professors, are also
different abroad. Professors no longer have to be merely teachers
but can be friends as well. "The onus is always on the student
to establish a rapport. My professors always remember me by first
name and I consider some more as friends than as professors. This
is because I took the initiative to introduce myself to them. I
know of countless students who go through their classes being just
another face," says Reza. College requires students to take
independent initiatives. Those who don't, will inevitably be left
out.
Aside from managing academics, adapting to western culture
is no easy task. University students are required to be mature,
independent and responsible, something high schoolers are not. Family
and friends are far away and students can feel isolated and left
to fend for themselves. "If you are not mature, you can get
blown away with the tremendous responsibility that comes from doing
it alone," says Reza. With no one to watch over, it's very
easy to get distracted and involve oneself in things like alcohol
or drugs - something common to westerners.
Says Asif, "The minute I stepped onto the American flight
that was to take me to the US, I was bombarded with their culture.
I felt like I was being attacked from all sides and that feeling
is still there, even after three years of being in the US. However,
I am able to cope with it better now. I have seen several expats
fall prey to the lure of this culture and I have seen them realise
their follies. It's the small things that can add to one's unhappiness
in a foreign country: the food, the cold, unconsciously breaking
into Urdu."
Dharani agrees, adding, "Surviving on your own, no matter
how much the thought amuses and thrills people, isn't all that it's
made out to be.
Despite all the adjustments involved, most students still
believe a foreign education is worthwhile. "It's definitely
worth it," says Baxamoosa. "It has made me stronger, much
more open, tolerant and confident."
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