by Katheryne Fields, GRSP Executive Director
Two by two, Georgia college students made their way to
Denmark and Norway for the summer. Patrick Chichester and Alana Milner attended
the University of Oslo in Norway while Hendley Jones and Claire Jerguson
attended Aarhus University in Denmark for summer sessions as part of the
partnership with Georgia Rotary Student Program, Norwegian Rotarians as well as
District 1450 Rotarians in Denmark.
While GRSP primarily serves international college students
who come to Georgia for one year of studies, the summer school programs allow
Georgia students an opportunity to study abroad and experience a cultural
exchange through the Oslo International Summer School program, which has been a
longstanding affiliation for GRSP, and by attending Aarhus, which was an
inaugural opportunity. The scholarship recipients completed an application for
the summer semester abroad, were recommend by a Georgia Rotarian and were
selected by a committee within GRSP leadership.
Each of the students stated making friends with one another
as well as students from around the world was an added benefit to the
experience. In addition to Denmark and Norway, their global friendships spanned
from Australia, Ukraine, Scotland, Brazil, China, South Korea, Spain, Canada to
California, Wisconsin, Iowa and Minnesota.
Chichester, a senior at the University of Georgia, spent
five months in a study abroad in South Africa before his trip to Norway. He
appreciated balance of lectures and excursions in his courses. He as well as
the others enjoyed visiting area monuments, museums, mountains and more.
Milner, a recent graduate of Georgia Southern
University, took a class in architecture, appreciating the opportunity to learn
about to urban planning and then visualize it, along with the comprehensive
planning of their public transportation system. She was impressed with the
sustainability and green initiatives she witnessed throughout Norway.
Jones, a recent graduate of the University of Georgia,
enjoyed the opportunity to view Denmark through the eyes of a local. He said
they saw a lot more of the country than they would have visited without a host.
He said he was surprised by the weather. Although he had been warned it could
change from morning to evening, the transition from sun to rain with wind and
back again was so striking and unexpected. He was intrigued by a tour of an
over 55 adult community called Balance, a housing concept he hopes to see
adopted in the United States.
Jerguson, a senior at Georgia Southern University,
recognized the time spent with around the table with locals was beneficial for
them to learn more about Danish cultures as well as the cuisine. She enjoyed
the slow pace of the dinner meals which were filled with conversations that
included sports, politics, academics as well as Rotary initiatives. She said
they also tried Danish food that they likely would not have tried if they were
not in the company of locals.
Local Rotarians described the students as great
representatives of a younger generation of ambitious, future-oriented, focused,
hard-working and kind people who will be great leaders and role models for
their families, friends and future colleagues. The four scholarship students
were thankful for the opportunity extended to them to study abroad and
appreciated the time and financial support the local Rotarians extended on
their behalf.