Top 10 … reasons why our Intensive Spanish Course is the best!

Monday, January 23rd, 2012
1. From basic to proficient in one week – our course starts with the basics and progresses to include medical terminology. This will really help you in a hospital environment.

DSC05324 150x150 Top 10 ... reasons why our Intensive Spanish Course is the best!

Learning Spanish helps you translate menus

2. Focus on your discipline – We make sure our teachers in Mendoza and Arequipa know each student’s clinical interests before you even fly out to your destination. By the time you start, they will have developed specific material that will help you learn the terminology needed for your placement.

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What the one week intensive Spanish course is really like.

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

The first day on the Intensive Spanish Course was nice and easy. We had a quick orientation tour around the main streets and sights of Mendoza, followed by a light lunch at a quaint restaurant. In the evening, we hung out in the kitchen, cooking and eating (or finishing) the fresh empanadas and alfajores de maicena we had just made. This was going to be easy…. or so I thought!

The rest of the Spanish week was anything but ¨tranquilo¨….. roll out of bed at 8AM, 4 rigorous hours of Spanish with Inés, 30 minutes to change out of my pyjamas, and then an afternoon of excursions with Jose. True to its name, this was definitely an intensive Spanish week. But every moment of it was brilliant. Each day was completely different, with some days packed with more than one activity. And siestas didn’t count!  I could tell, at various points through any given day, that I was experiencing a moment that would be a fondly remembered memory for years to come.

Like my first tango class with Ana y Luis. I was dreading the lesson as I have never been particularly coordinated, and I hate dancing with a partner. But 5 minutes in and I was already in love with this dance. Since they don´t speak English, it was difficult to understand the technicalities of each step: ¨Where does my hand go? Why can´t I do that? I do what with my foot?¨ But because it´s such a physical and intuitive dance, the body language facilitates the Spanish, making the language barrier a non-issue. Ana y Luis will repeatedly tell you to feel, listen, and let your body speak to you. Cheesy, I know, but totally true. So just go with the flow!

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Programme Manager Freddy joins students on Arusha Village Experience.

Thursday, September 15th, 2011

So, I was lucky enough to go with some students and spend a week in Engaruka a village in the heart of Maasai land! Engaruka is really rural Tanzania and is very different from life in a busy city like Arusha. There is no mobile phone signal in or around the village, so it is quite daunting to switch off the mobile for one full week, and definitely feels strange to be without modern comforts.

To travel to Engaruka, we took the taxi from the house which takes about fifteen minutes to the Arusha local bus, we took the bus from there to Engaruka via Mto wa Mbu (Arusha to Mto wa Mbu is about 3hrs) which was very busy and dusty, but definitely interesting and typically African. After stopping at Mto Wa Mbu (Mosquito River) for some food and drink for two hours, the bus turns off the main road into the wilderness across the Rift Valley, and you suddenly realise just how rural the village experience is going to be. The journey, although long and very bumpy is a fantastic introduction to Maasai life, as you see wild animals like grant gazelle, zebras and giraffes passing the bus and lots of Maasai in traditional dress. Don’t be surprise to see driver tie the goat on top of the bus; just remember you are in Africa – TIA!!

After arriving around 19:00 in the evening we were taken to our home for the week, which is a big change from the Work the World house in Arusha………no electricity, no signal, no internet  but the house is nice and clean and cosy. The beds are made of sticks with mattresses not like maasai bed which is made the same but with cow skin instead of mattresses, our beds are very comfortable – honestly!  The most important thing to say is that the Maasai are very friendly and welcoming, especially if you can learn a few words of Maasai and make the effort to communicate in their own language like “Takwenya” reply “Iko” or “Supai” reply “Ipa” all this means how are you and reply is fine.

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The weekly question – Are you enjoying the local music and is there a type of music or song that has defined your stay?

Tuesday, July 26th, 2011

Students are always talking about the great Busy Bees cover bands in Pokhara and last week some of our students in Mwanza ended up going to the Serengeti Fiesta where they got to see Shaggy as well as a whole host of local bands. This week we have decided to ask the houses Are you enjoying the local music, does it get you dancing and is there a type of music or song that has defined your stay?”

Paradiso 2 150x150 The weekly question   Are you enjoying the local music and is there a type of music or song that has defined your stay?

Dancing at the orphanage

The most popular style of music in Tanzania is Bongo Flava which is the nickname for Tanzanian hip-hop music.  Jennifer in Arusha was quick to jump in with “I definitely like the local music – it’s the thing that brings everyone together from all backgrounds and encourages them to dance. It was great seeing the children at the orphanage dance. It can be a way to communicate, the language of music automatically lights up everyone’s faces!”

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The Weekly Question – what has been your clinical highlight this week?

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011
Arusha Jasmine Koh 8 150x150 The Weekly Question – what has been your clinical highlight this week?

Newborn in Arusha

Whether it be the treatment of patients, rare and tropical diseases or progressed pathologies, an overseas placement is both fascinating and a great learning environment where students are often exposed to things that they have only read about in the past. Although we have asked this question a couple of times we always get different answers.

James in Arusha examined a patient with a hepatonegaly larger than any that he had seen in Hong Kong. “Another close second would be a multiple casualty car accident that caused 9 deaths.”

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Ghana – the gateway to Africa

Tuesday, April 19th, 2011

Wow, where do I start? Unlike when I was writing an essay at university, I think I could easily write 10,000 words about my trip to Ghana in record time. As not to bore you all I will summarise my trip below but please do not hesitate to get in touch should you have more any questions.

I took the evening KLM flight to Accra via Amsterdam. As with all great trips I thought I was never going to make it when my first flight was delayed leaving London and I had to run through Amsterdam airport at record spe

Team Ghana 150x150 Ghana   the gateway to Africa

Team Ghana

ed to make my on-going flight. I made it though and was then on a nonstop flight to Ghana. This was my first trip to Africa and I was extremely excited, I think everyone is warned that your arrival may be a little intimidating with all the hustle and bustle and the locals keen to get you into their taxi or to book into their hotel but I was pleasantly surprised. I walked through the airport arrivals with ease and Joe, the Programme Manger was the first person to try and get my attention.

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Placement preparation in Dar es Salaam

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

Baptista has been busy working with one of Dar’s biggest government hospitals to secure some amazing placements in all the major disciplines. He gave me a bit more information about the hospital and what students can expect out of placements:

“This hospital is the biggest referral hospital in the country and offers our students some fantastic opportunities. It treats both private and regional referral patients from all over Tanzania, so the departments will see an enormous variety of conditions, and with almost 2500 beds we know it is going to be busy!

NMH MOI 5 150x150 Placement preparation in Dar es Salaam

The hospital in Dar

Although it was originally one big hospital, they now have a separate centre for orthopaedics.  Tanzania always has busy orthopaedics wards because of the huge number of accidents on the road and in mines.  This separate centre makes treating patients far more efficient and allows us to arrange specific placements in orthopaedics, neural surgery, traumatology and physiotherapy.

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