torsdag den 7. maj 2009

Criminology

Uh-uh, fandt lige denne besked inde på BalckBoard;

"Posted: Wed, Apr 15, 2009 -- The Inspection of the criminology examination
The Inspection of the interim examination will be on Monday 11 May 2009 at 08.30 in 4.00.18"

Det må jo betyde, at karakteren skal være os i hænde inden fredag.. Temmelig fjollet at gennemgå re-eksamen uden at man ved om man er bestået eller ej.. Right?

Men puha.. Ku FANDME være rart, hvis man bestod.. Men.. ja.. Iiih!

Tilbage til bachelor.. Ejvind Sandal bad mig ringe tilbage på mandag angående hans slides omkring selvregulering.. MANDAG?! Sagde jo pænt jo-jo, men mandag er fandme sent! - På den anden side kan det hænde, at jeg har flere spørgsmål til ham på det tidspunkt..
Gider ikke bacholer..

onsdag den 15. april 2009

Criminology

- gik a' helvede til.. Nærmest tro kopi af den første eksamen.. Bortset fra, at jeg denne gang følte at jeg havde styr på det hele inden jeg gik ind..

Eksamenen er bygget op af 8 spørgsmål (hver værd 10 point) med 2-3 delspørgsmål..
Tre ting gik galt til eksamen..
1) Der blev spurgt til Miller's "Cultural et-eller-andet Theory" og jeg var blank! Miller lød super-bekendt, men jeg kunne bare ikke sætte det sammen med noget "cultural".. Viser sig så, at dét der spørges om.. i professorens slides er blevet omtalt som focal concerns/values og ligeledes er det dét jeg har kaldt det i mine noter.. Jeg er annoyed..
2) Der spørges til "Moral Panic" og jeg er HELT blank.. Eller.. Der ringer en tiny-tiny bell.. Men mit svar blir noget lala.. Efterfølgende finder jeg ud af, at "Moral Panic" er beskrevet på 2 slides, som det ENESTE sted.. Det omtales IKKE i bogen.. Og det handler om hvordan pressen kan blæse en historie op fra ingenting.. "Moral Panic" er sgu da alt andet end forklarende omkring dét?! Sigh..
3) "the so-called absolutte and relative sanction theories" aner jeg fortsat ikke hvad er.. Har forsøgt at finde det i bogen, i noter, sågar googlet - uden held.. Endte med at skrive om pønologi.. Nævnte nogle af Beccarias 10 punkter som revolutionerede måden at dømme og straffe..

Jeg talte sammen til 41 (fuckin' 41) næsten helt-sikre point.. Det er 41 ud af 80.. Og nogenlunde hvad jeg fik det til sidst, mener jeg.. Og ud fra sidste gang må jeg jo konstatere at det jo ikke er nok.. ARGH!

Plan B.. eller C må det jo så være, er at høre om et tredje forsøg er muligt, og så har jeg en idé om at en mundtlig eksamen vil være mit eneste håb.. Det her skriftlige-husk-lige-præcis-dét-manden-har-valgt-at-spørge-om, fungerer jo tydeligvis ikke..

fredag den 3. april 2009

SUK!

Det der hollandske internationale jura-kontor.. puzzles me..! Nu valgte de så at svare på min mail ang. min Human Rights-eksamen.. At det havde de da allerede fortalt mig pr. mail fra d. 6. marts.. What?! tænker jeg, og finder så mailen frem, hvor JEG læser det som om at de bare bekræfter min Criminology-eksamen.. SUK! Så ku jeg da også bare lade være med at dumpe TO eksaminer .. ..
Men i al fald er det vist helt i orden, alt sammen.. THANKS for telling me..!

Værsgo at følge den sindsoprivende spændende mailkorrespondance..; (suk!)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nyeste mail, modtaget i dag.. "Jamen, vi har da ordnet din Human Rights-eksamen"-isch

RE: re-sit Human Rights‏
Fra: International Office - Bureau Buitenland (internationaloffice@jur.ru.nl)
Sendt: 3. april 2009 10:55:14
Til: 'Cecilie Rasmussen' (C.Rasmussen@student.ru.nl)

I sent you an e-mail 0n 6 March, telling you that all had been set up for you, also HR(26 May). I fyou want to take the oral exam instead, you should contact prof van Kempen:
P.H.vanKempen@jur.ru.nl:

mrs Noëlle Padberg, MA
mrs Suzanne van Buchem
Radboud University Nijmegen
Faculty of Law
International Office / Bureau Buitenland
P.O.Box 9049
6500 KK Nijmegen
T: +31243612307
F: +31243616145
E: internationaloffice@jur.ru.nl

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Min nummer to mail, da de ikke rigtig svarede på den første.. og med det lille tvist, at jeg måske ku finde på at lave rav i det hele..

Van: cidsel@hotmail.com [mailto:cidsel@hotmail.com] Namens Cecilie Rasmussen
Verzonden: donderdag 2 april 2009 14:10
Aan: internationaloffice@jur.ru.nl
Onderwerp: re-sit Human Rights

Hi Noëlle and Suzanne, here I go again.. Since you didn't answer I gather that you do not know, how I should do with my Human Rights-exam?I'm considering going to Holland in the end of April/start of May and was wondering of the possibility of doing an oral HR-exam, while I'm there.. JUST checking the possibilities, so don't start anything, but IF I choose to make an earlier oral exam, should it go through you or should I contact the professor personally?

Thank you,
Cecilie Rasmussen


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Min første mail, da jeg så "truslen" om en mundtlig eksamen..

From: c.rasmussen@student.ru.nl
To: internationaloffice@jur.ru.nl
Subject: re-sit Human Rights
Date: Thu, 12 Mar 2009 09:03:46 +0100

Just saw this message on Blackboard; "In principle there will be a written exam. In case of few participants an oral exam will take place. This will be announced at blackboard one week before the exam."How does that put me? Should I be ready to go to NL untill the message comes on BlackBoard or will there be special arrangements for me? (just considering buying the ticket with refund-possibilities now, so that I'll be able to get a bit cheaper..)

Thank you,
Cecilie Rasmussen


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Wed, 11 Mar 2009 15:12:53 +0100
From: InternationalOffice@jur.ru.nl
Subject: re-sit Criminology
To: Anoushklara@hotmail.com; teresarato@hotmail.com; dovile_skujyte@yahoo.com; cera06ab@student.cbs.dk; lucas.riveill@gmail.com; slajs@interia.pl; petra.meinl@gmail.com; melindaperecsenyi@yahoo.com; cristina_88@hotmail.com; mery_lapecas@hotmail.com; arthur-adam@hotmail.fr; JMParnass@student.ru.nl

Dear students,
I have registered you on TIS for the re-sit Criminology, 8 April 2009, 9.00-12.00 hrs. Let me know if you do NOT want to take this re-sit exam.
[I will send the exam by fax to the two students who have gone back home( Dovile and Cecilie).]
Noëlle Padberg

mrs Noëlle Padberg, MA
mrs Suzanne van Buchem
Radboud University Nijmegen
Faculty of Law
International Office / Bureau Buitenland
P.O.Box 9049
6500 KK Nijmegen
T: +31243612307
F: +31243616145
E: internationaloffice@jur.ru.nl

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Det her er så den mail, hvor de (åbenbart) bekræfter at BEGGE eksaminer er klar parat til start.. (Hmmm..! - og jeg har IKKE add'et stavefejl, hun skriver virkelig "you exam" og IKKE "youR examS", hvilket ville være mere retvisende, hvis hun virkelig mener at denne mail skulle stå for begge eksaminer..)

RE: Re-takes‏
Fra: International Office - Bureau Buitenland (internationaloffice@jur.ru.nl)
Sendt: 6. marts 2009 10:42:43
Til: 'Cecilie Rasmussen' (C.Rasmussen@student.ru.nl)

Yes, everything is set up now for you exam by fax( or e-mail). When we get nearer to the date, I will contact ms Vesterlund Frandsen again, and let you know.
Best wishes,
Noëlle Padberg

mrs Noëlle Padberg, MA
mrs Suzanne van Buchem
Radboud University Nijmegen
Faculty of Law
International Office / Bureau Buitenland
P.O.Box 9049
6500 KK Nijmegen
T: +31243612307
F: +31243616145
E: internationaloffice@jur.ru.nl

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Van: cidsel@hotmail.com [mailto:cidsel@hotmail.com] Namens Cecilie Rasmussen
Verzonden: dinsdag 3 maart 2009 17:03A
an: internationaloffice@jur.ru.nlCC: lvf.intoff@cbs.dk
Onderwerp: Re-takes

Dear Noëlle and Suzanne
I've started reading my criminology book again with the intentions of attending the Criminology exam on the 8th of April - here at my home university. As far as I know, you have accepted and they have accepted, so I just want to check if everything is alright with the preparations? Will you just send the questions to my home university (Mrs. Lotte Vesterlund Frandsen) and then she'll scan and send them to you, or how will it work in practice? And the same questions actually goes for the exam, Protection of Human Rights in International Law on the 28th of May - is everything set there? I'm sorry that I keep bothering you, but I just need to know that everything is sorted out.

Thank you,
Cecilie Rasmussens-0852333

mandag den 16. marts 2009

Langsommelige mennesker!!

Sendte den her mail til det internationale kontor d. 12. marts;

"Just saw this message on Blackboard; "In principle there will be a written exam. In case of few participants an oral exam will take place. This will be announced at blackboard one week before the exam."
How does that put me? Should I be ready to go to NL untill the message comes on BlackBoard or will there be special arrangements for me?

Thank you,
Cecilie Rasmussen"

Har stadig ikke fået svar.. Men er det ikke crazy?! Én uge inden vil de fortælle om det er mundtligt eller skriftligt.. Det kan man da ikke!
I og for sig åd jeg gerne det, at skulle tage til Holland og tage til mundtlig eksamen, hvis jeg vidste det NU og kunne købe billetten NU! Men når de først fortæller hvordan det bli'r 7 DAGE før, så kommer min billet jo til at koste en milliard! Og ja, jeg kunne godt bare bestille billetten nu, men nu er jeg blevet så'n irriteret-stædig.. NÆGTER! :)

Og som sædvanligt står verden stille på deres kontor, når jeg stiller svære svar.. Ville faktisk blive så'n helt glad og ihvertfald forholde mig i ro et stykke tid, hvis de bare sagde; "Det ved vi ikke, men vi undersøger det" - i mit hoved sidder de lige nu og drikker kaffe og griner af hende den åndssvage dansker der bli'r ved med at bekymre sig..
Irriteret!

Og bare rolig, de er ikke bedre herhjemme; Opdagede tilbage i december (d. 1. december!!) at min Miniprojekt-karakter var forsvundet.. - Er kommet så langt, at min opgaven er fundet, og karakteren ligeså (d. 26. januar).. Men så er det ellers gået i stå.. Rykkede hende forrige tirsdag, rykkede hende sidste tirsdag.. Og tror sgu jeg sender en lille mail i morgen igen..

Suk!

onsdag den 11. marts 2009

Criminology re-take!

Fik det her i dag;

"Dear students,
I have registered you on TIS for the re-sit Criminology, 8 April 2009, 9.00-12.00 hrs. Let me know if you do NOT want to take this re-sit exam.
[I will send the exam by fax to the two students who have gone back home( Dovile and Cecilie).]
Noëlle Padberg"

Skrev straks tilbage, at jeg bare er SÅ klar! :)

- eller.. det bli'r jeg ihvertfald.. Min fine Criminology-læse-op-halløj er gået lidt i stå i min bachelor-krise, men tror jeg er ved at være ovenvande igen..
Bare rart at det er helt på det rene.. Virker mere rigtigt når man får en mail uden at have bedt om den så'n specifikt..

Gad vide hvem Dovile er..?

fredag den 13. februar 2009

Travel Report

For at gøre sig fortjent til sit Erasmus-legat, skal man indsende en rejserapport som andre håbefulde udvekslingsstuderende så kan få information fra.. Den er hermed lavet.. Tog satme 3 timer og har som sædvanligt sikkert skrevet alt for meget, men jaja, wtf.. Enjoy!

Radboud University, Nijmegen, Netherlands
Cecilie Bruhn Rasmussen
+45 40 89 71 83
cera06ab@student.cbs.dk / cidsel@hotmail.com
August 2008 – January 2009
Bsc in Business Administration and Commercial Law, 5th semester
________________________________________
1. Application
I have always been considering going abroad, so when it come out that we were recommended to go abroad on the 5th semester, I didn’t hesitate. My essential reasons was to get my English improved, or just used – and to get the experience of going abroad and the process it takes and then of course all the different cultures you get to know from the other international students.
I first of all started of taking the TOEFL-test and as that is quite a lot of money it seemed silly not to use it afterwards.

2. Preparation phase
It sounds very cliché but start of in good time… As soon as I got my TOEFL result I more or less sat up a camp on the International Office and started looking through the different folders. You don’t get much help, as the employees mostly know about the possibilities from the students who’ve already been there, so they just tell you to get inspiration from the travel reports.
To start off with I wanted to go somewhere different, where no one from my degree programme had been before, but I simply gave up, because it was so difficult and no help was possible…
I ended up choosing Radboud University because not that many had been there before, and because I wanted to go somewhere different. To begin with I was very ‘hooked’ on going to London or somewhere else in the UK, but a friend of mine said that to him that sounded a bit silly, because “chances are that you’ll go to UK anyway, so pick somewhere where you’re never going to end up anyway.” – And that way, I ended up in Nijmegen.
When it comes to choosing subjects be aware of the difference between Bachelor and Master courses. I ended up choosing a lot of Master courses which I couldn’t be enrolled at, because I do not have my bachelor yet. That messed up my learning agreement a lot, and thereby my pre-approval. So be aware.

3. Arrival at the host university
I managed to miss the most of the introduction week, but according to the others it had been great and something you did not wanted to miss (and according to the pictures and videos it DID look great!). Before the introduction week there’d also been a language course, I obviously missed that too and I must admit that I didn’t hear anything about it being great or bad. I tried to find a language course during the semester, but the courses that I found was about 300€, so I decided to skip it.
Changing and choosing new subjects is very easy and the international offices are very nice and helpful.
The library and computer facilities are very good. Your student card is used to borrow the books, as soon as you activate it at the main library, and your student number is used to log on to the computers. To print and copy you need a “chip-knip” which you can get at your Dutch bank (if you choose to get a Dutch bank account) otherwise you can by the card at an information desk. The people at the law library were very helpful so don’t hesitate to ask for help. The library also arranges a “guided tour” in the library where you get to know the book system, how to copy and so on – go there!
As we on CBS have “e-campus” and “SiteScape”, Radboud has “KISS”/”TIS” and “Blackboard”. Make sure you get to know these sites and get access as quick as possible, as the information here is quite crucial!
When it comes to purchasing books I didn’t buy a single book at the campus book store. You had to wait weeks for the book and it was both faster and cheaper to buy the books online, as far as I found out. Besides that, you have to buy readers, which is a slow and stupid process. You have to order the reader online (IF you have the right bank card, otherwise you have to order, print out your order, go to the office and pay), wait for an email to arrive telling you that the reader is ready, print out the email as a receipt, go to the office and get your reader. And again this takes about one week, sometimes more.

4. Subject description
a. Comparative Constitutional Law (7 ECTS) – 4CMPCONL
This is the class where almost all the nationalities come together. You need to know your own constitution, but it is possible to just go along. The professor, Prof. Kortmann, is now retired, so I do not know whether the course will continue in the same way.
We used the book, “Courts and Political Insitutions” which was about 20€ and then we were divided in groups who presented the chapters you were suppose to have read. That resulted in very different lectures and depended on that people had read and participated.
The exam was like a nice small talk with the professor at his office. We talked about Denmark and our constitution and then compared it a bit to other constitutions.
There’s a book (“Constitutional Law of 15 EU Member States”) at the library with all the constitutions, where I copied the Danish constitution to know what I was suppose to know (Professor Kortmann, was co-writer on the book).

b. International & Comparative Copyright Law (7 ECTS) – 4INCOPYL
Professor Dr. Antoon Quaedvlieg is a very happy and smiling man, but sometimes quite confusing as he has a lot to tell, but don’t really know how to structure.
The lectures are very entertaining as he runs back and forth and has a smile and behavior like Mr. Bean.
There’s a reader (about 25€) containing the legislation and that is the only thing you can bring to the exam, which is written. The professor puts out notes on BlackBoard, but besides them, the reader is the only thing you can read to prepare for the exam, as there’s no real curriculum and your notes from the lectures often doesn’t make sence.
Rumor is that almost everyone passes the exam.

c. Protection of Human Rights in International Law (7 ECTS) – 4PROTHR
Professor Piet Hein van Kempen is a very intelligent and interesting professor and encourages to discussions by saying; “I disagree with everything you say” – This makes it even better when you get him to agree with you.
There’s quite a lot to read, and as the professor focuses more on human right discussions in class, he doesn’t really go over the readings. Therefore the written exam is very difficult, if you depend on using the discussions from class.
You use a book “Human Rigths” by Tomuschat that cost 20-30€ and buy the professors reader, which is also about 30€ and contains all relevant legislation.
The reader is the only thing you can bring to the exam.

d. Criminology (7 ECTS) – 4CRIMSOC
Professor Dr. Terpstra teaches this course which is very theoretical and also has a lot of psychology students. The book “Theoretical Criminology” was quite expensive, 70€, so a lot of the students made copies of the book instead, which was worth it.
The book goes over all the criminology theories through time and these theories and people behind are the things you’re suppose to know by heart to pass the exam. Therefore it’s very important to read the book thorough and have a good memory, as you cannot bring anything but your dictionaries to the exam, which is a 3 hour written exam.
I found the exam very hard, but probably mostly because I’m not used to having exams without books.

e. Borders & Identities in Europe (6 ECTS) - ABBW-BCU306-71-2008‏
This was my one management course, which was lectured by two professor; Professor Hank van Houtum and Professor Martin van der Velde. I never ended up buying the book “New Europe: Imagined Spaces”, so I don’t know the price of it.
The grading is a weighted average of an essay manifest (30 %) and a written exam (70%). The manifest can be anything from an essay, poem, dance, song, to a poster, slideshow or YouTube video and our question was “What is a border” and everyone I know passed – The written exam wasn’t hard to pass either.
The course also offers an excursion to Brussels which you pay 70€ for. We went to the Parliament, the Commission and of course a tour in the city. Recommendable!

5. Accommodation
I got accommodation with help from the university who applied me to the SSHN (Short Stay Housing Nijmegen), which is a housing office who has accommodations all over Nijmegen.
There are mainly three places that the international students lived; Grifdijk (Lent), Hoogeveldt or Vossenfeld.
a. Grifdijjk was among the international students just called Lent, because I was situated in a small city outside Nijmegen, or just “The Erasmus Ghetto”. This was where most of the international students lived and also where I lived. It consists of 8 buildings with 8 apartments in each, where 4 people lived in each apartment. As I arrived late, it was perfect to get to live with 3 different nationalities from Day 1, as I could meet their friends and thereby get to know everyone.
Lent was a bit like having 1-200 roommates, as you could ALWAYS find someone home that you could go and talk to or borrow stuff from and there would always be a party somewhere.
The apartments were quite poor with holes in the walls and very boring non-colour-grey on the walls. There was a kitchen with a gas stove (no oven) and a little fridge with an even tinnier freezer, but there was enough kitchen aids to get by. Moreover there was a living room in connection with the kitchen, with a dinner table and four chairs and a TV. We also had a sofa and a sofa table, but that was very different from each apartment. Furthermore there was a toilet and a shower and a washing machine and a tumble dryer – very nice!
The rooms would minimum contain a bed, a table, a chair, lamps, an armchair and a closet, but some had more luck and more furniture and some even went to IKEA to add some extra to their room.
I loved this place, mostly because of the “ghetto” effect; when you arrived to Grifdijk and went to your apartment you would at least have waved at 4-5 persons on your way. The only down side of the place was the bike ride to the city centre (15min) and the university (30min) as you had to cross the Waal (the canal) and you would ALWAYS have a face wind.
The rent was 305€ a month.

b. Hoogeveldt
Here people lived about 12 people together (can’t remember exactly) and shared a quite big kitchen with stove, oven and fridges and freezers. The toilets and showers were shared as well and there were also washing machine and tumble dryers which they shared.
It was very different whether you got to live in a good corridor or not. Usually it would be one international student together with Dutch/German students and it very much depended on how much these students wanted to do together and together with the international student. But the international students living at Hoogeveldt would visit each other, as there was quite a lot living there as well.
The place is right beside Piecken, which is a student bar that we would go to almost every Tuesday, and also very close to the university.
As far as I remember the rent was 305€ a month here as well.

c. Vossenfeld
This was the most far out place to live (from my Lent point of view of course). It was quite close to the university (15min bike) but 30 minutes bike ride from city centre and 45-60 minutes from Lent! I was only there once, but as far as I know, they are 6-10 people sharing a quite big kitchen which is also a living room. The toilets are shared, but the rooms are quite big and with a private shower.
I don’t know the rent, but I guess that it was quite the same; 305€.

The Dutch people living these three places paid less in rent, but that was because of the furniture in the room – all the rooms contained the same furniture as described in the Lent paragraph.
Some of the students also lived in private housing, but I actually don’t know how they got it, but I think it was through SSHN as well. www.sshn.nl

6. Social life
The ISN (International Student Network) were the ones arranging the introduction week and dividing us in mentor groups with Dutch mentors and they furthermore throughout the semester arranged parties and excursions, so keep an eye on emails and announcements from there and participate in the mentor group dinners.
I also joined the JFV which is the law association. There you have a great chance to meet other Dutch students, as they meet every first Wednesday in the month to have free beer in city centre. They also arrange events and parties. As far as I remember the fee was 15€ for a semester, so as long as you participate in the activities and drink some of the free beers, it’s worth it.
Radboud University also has a very impressive sports center where you can use the fitness facilities or attend stuff like yoga, kick-fit, squash or the football, handball, volley, basket or other teams. The sports card was 35€ as far as I remember for a semester and with that you could attend everything. If you wanted to join a team, you might have to pay an extra fee to the club.
City centre is a great place to go out. The main street is packed with different bars and in the introduction week they went on a pub crawl, so already there you get a good idea of where you want to go. The night life is almost on every night, but Thursday is the big night for students.

7. Other practical and economic conditions
A bike is crucial. The Dutch people all have at least one bike. A return ticket with the bus was 2,50€, you could buy a discount card, but I never did, as I was biking. We did a lot of travelling, mostly with RyanAir from Düsseldorf or just by train. When it comes to train travelling make sure to book in advance, otherwise the prices go up or you just can’t go unless you’re a rebel (Dutch people don’t act spontaneous, so going to Paris on the same day as buying the ticket is impossible – at first).
We were told that working permit was difficult and too expensive because of some insurance requirement, so I actually never looked into it.
You need to bring some pass photos with you. When registering in Nijmegen they ask for your translated birth certificate, but I got registered without.
Living in the Netherlands is quite the same as in Denmark. They got Aldi and Spar as well as we have and the prices are quite the same. But a warning; The beers look very cheap, but that’s because they’re TINY! A normal beer at a pub in Nijmegen was somewhere between 0,2L and 0,3L(!) and then it’s not cheap paying 2€…
I opened a Dutch bank account to avoid paying fees every time I used my Danish credit card. Turned out to be quite difficult to get it to work, as they send all kinds of, for me at that time, useless information, as I was waiting for my pin number and the bank information so I could transfer money to the card. But don’t hesitate to go to bank and ask every time you get a letter, unless of course you got someone who reads Dutch who can translate. I got offers about mobile communication “with” my bank account, free movie tickets and offer for free popcorn before I actually got any REAL bank stuff.
A last warning is that they bike both ways in the roundabouts (VERY confusing and wrong feeling the first time!) and the police are very good at catching people without bike lights (20€ fee) and bikes parked outside the marked areas, so be aware.

8. In retrospect
I’d read all the travel reports before leaving, so I felt pretty prepared. Furthermore the university is very well organized, so most stuff is to be found online, and my email correspondence with the International Office at the university helped a lot as well regarding my learning agreement.
It might would have been good for me to know, that I was suppose to go to Nijmegen already primo/medio August, then I probably wouldn’t have gone on that charter trip.
I would have liked to learn how not spontaneous the Dutch people are. You have to have an appointment if you want to do anything in the Dutch system. I got my bag stolen and wanted to report it. To do that I had to wait until Monday, to go to the police, to get an appointment, and then come back 2-3 days later to fill out the report. In the meantime another guy found my bag and contacted the police who by that time didn’t have a report on it yet and told him that he could just keep it then. Thank God that the guy made an extra effort to find me.
And then of course regarding the travelling. Train tickets have to be bought 3-4 days in advance if you want to go outside the Netherlands. No spontaneous behavior here.

9. Evaluation
Academically the University was a 5. The professors and lectures that I attended were good.
Generally it was 4½. The employees at the offices were nice and made an effort to be helpful. But they were sometimes hard to reach and here after returning I had to make some arrangements, where the correspondence with the University has been a bit difficult. But still good!

10. Inspiration
Well, I’ve mentioned the most; the sports center, Blackboard (seemed more integrated than SiteScape), ISN, JFV and then they had guest computers, which I haven’t noticed on CBS. But there you could log on, which was good when you hadn’t received your logon data yet.

If it got any interest I had a blog during my stay… There’s of course a lot of nonsense, but there’s also some good descriptions of my experiences and pictures of my room, surroundings and great friends.
www.uninijmegen.blogspot.com

torsdag den 12. februar 2009

Borders & Identities in Europe PASSED!

Sådan dér.. Én re-eksamen mindre at bekymre sig om.. Eller altså.. Det burde jo aldrig være blevet en re-eksamen og blev det så heller ikke..
Der var sendt en mail ud med alle vores studie-numre, IKKE ordnet.. De var sikkert ordnet efter navn tidligere, men det har de jo selvfølgelig taget ud.. Ku se, at der var én der dumpet og vedkommende var ikke mig.. YES! Fik så søgt på mit studienummer (tak til Ctrl+B i Excel) og ku se, at jeg havde fået 6,5.. Ikke prangende, havde muligvis håbet på mere, men who cares?! Det eneste der overføres er bestået/ikke bestået, og i min verden "ingen re-eksamen"-JATAK!

Det her udvekslingshalvår har bare gjort mig ræd for eksamensresultater.. NOT good..
Men hey! 3 down.. 2 to go (again..) !!