Wednesday, 29 August 2012

learning the language

Coming to Austria and having to learn German is very difficult for me. I have never been the one that is good at learning other languages...i was awful at French. But I’m so driven to learn German that I’m going to do anything in my power to be able to carry on a conversation. I’m sure i will eventually be able to because I’m surrounded by it every day, but i want to learn in the first couple months so I’m not always saying "ich bin emily" and smiling and saying "ja" when i don’t understand someone.

#1. Know some of the language before getting to the host country...(my mistake)
#2. I’m reading lots of children books...yes you may think I’m too old for that....but trust me i opened the first page and was already lost and i have learned a lot from them already











#3. Going out everywhere with my host family...my host family teaches me a lot when we are out. My host mom will speak to me in High German than translate it to English and point to things to help me know the words.
#4. I’m getting a tutor! My host mom’s friend is studying German and English so she offered to help me...I’m not going to deny that offer
#5 learning the swear words...you never know when you are going to ask someone to say a word and they make you swear at someone instead...its smart to know these things.
#6 and last but not least i try to speak in German always...even if it’s just the little words i know it’s helping a lot
....i think if other exchange students that dont know there host language either this things really do help.
Thank god i have a good host family !!
Wish me luck. xo

 

 

 


Tuesday, 28 August 2012

 Canadian in Hallstatt


 salt mines

slide in the salt mines

Hallstatt from the water front

Altmünster - town of the language camp

First weeks

So i guess my other blog just stopped working...so this is why im making a whole new one anyways...
Hello I’m Emily Albanese and I’m living in Austria for a whole exchange year.
I’m doing a blog so that my friends and family can stop stalking me on Facebook and asking me a million question about the same thing. But also for the benefit of other new exchange students to see what it really means to be an exchange student and what kind of adventures i find along the way.
So right now i have been in Austria for 3 weeks and it feels like i have been here for 2 days. It’s going by so fast it’s crazy. I’m living in a beautiful town called Ried Im Innkreis, in Upper Austria. I’m living with my first amazing host family The Demmelbauer's. I have 2 brothers Florian and Christian who take me out everywhere and are so amazing to me and my host parents that do so much for me are Klaus and Marlies!
So in my blog I’m also going to be talking about the challenges, the differences and the adventures that i come across on my exchange year. So i have just gotten home from a crazy two week language camp with 72 other exchange students from all over the world. Language camp was fun after 3pm every day. Why i say after 3...because we sat in a classroom from 8-3 every day and learned German grammar. That was very hard to do. But when i got back to my host family, sitting in class for all those hours was well worth it. Note future exchange students learn language a little more than i did before you get to the country because every day i felt stressed about not knowing how to do anything. I only knew how to say "Hallo ich bin emily, ich komme aus kanada. Wie Gehts?"....that will get you by for 2 seconds in a conversation until someone starts wanting to have a long conversation with you and all you find yourself saying is "ja" smiling and nodding your head saying “ich bin aüsslander” (im a foreigner)  . In the 2 weeks we had a lot of free time after our classes. Me and my amazing friends/roommates from Florida would walk to town or walk to the mall. Emily and i one day wanted to go to the mall so we got a taxi there and the taxi driver was so happy to have 6 exchange students in his car he was taking pictures of us …oh ya as he was driving and did I mention he was driving standard, scared for my life. Than on the way back Emily and I had a fat joke and wanted to get McDonalds…yes they have McDonalds in Austria, but a lot cheaper and cleaner. We called a taxi on our OWN! This was a huge moment for us because the taxi company doesn’t talk any English. So we were jumping up and down in excitement knowing that we just did that ourselves. That week we didn’t have on Saturday or Sunday so we one of the days we went to the most beautiful towns Hallsatt, the home of the salt mines. We got to go into the salt mines and tour around the city it was so amazing. Than the next day they told us we were going for a short walk to see some scenery…UHM SHORT? Yeah right….we ended up walking an hour and a half up a mountain on the hottest day that week….i have never felt pain until this day. But for Austrians that’s a normal everyday walk. I better be in good shape after this year. I have to admit it was beautiful when we got to the top though.
Always that was most of my adventures of the first couple weeks and im sure I have many more to come
xo emmy