My first semester here at Baruch was very interesting. I had come straight from graduating high school two months earlier and had no idea what to expect. My high school was in Brooklyn, small campus about 1000 kids, not very diverse and I was very used to just fitting in. Flash forward to my first week at Baruch and I was sort of blown away. In the elevators there were people speaking all of these languages I'd never heard before, which turned out to be Russian, German, Korean, Chinese,etc. Even with class introductions, looking around the room and hearing each student's story about their background was fascinating. It made me want to know more and get to know everyone.
One day my professor decided for us to work in groups on a hefty project. One of my group members, a Korean girl, never really spoke up or gave her input she would just agree with what everyone else said. Finally I asked her privately why she never really gave her opinion on things. She told me that she'd just come from Korea and its different there from America. In most Asian countries its better to go with the group than to be an individual - it promotes harmony. So instead of ruffling feathers she was following what her culture taught her which was to promote harmony. It was a very interesting conversation, but I learned alot about her and about a culture I knew nothing about prior.
Yes, I felt a bit culture shocked coming to this school but now after four years, I feel so diverse and worldy. Worldy may be a stretch but you get the jist. Baruch is definitely a mind opener.
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Hello...
I'm Valerie, 23 year old junior majoring in busniss communications. Currently I work in retail and hope to take my talents and knowledge into the marketing and/or PR industries after grad.
I have a very laid back approach to most things, in this case business. For instance, my dream company to work for would have to be Google. That should give you a sense of my work style. For me, working in retail is one of the few jobs where you can have such flexibility in your work style. Working in an office setting is wonderful as long as I dont have to adhere to rigid dress codes and I can use my creativity to enhance the job - hence why finding an internship is so hard!
With this blog I plan to respond to articles or topics based on how I feel modern business should be run... from a less Zicklin approach. :)
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