Thursday, March 27, 2014

Trips!

In two and a half hours I will be meeting up with my friends outside my dorm to go to the airport. Our flight to Changsha(长沙) is at 7:05am so we need to catch a taxi to the airport around 5am. It’s going to be a 3 day trip and my first trip outside of Shanghai. You bet I’m super excited!

We’re flying into Changsha, which is the capital and largest city of Hunan province in south-central China. Then in the evening of our first day, we’ll be taking a 4-hour bus ride to Zhangjiajie(张家界), which is another city in the Hunan province that has numerous scenic areas, including Zhangjiajie National Forest Park (known as China's first national forest park). We will be spending the rest of our trip in Zhangjiajie and departing from the near airport.

I just gave you some information about my trip, but I actually had so little idea about these places until I just looked them up. I’m not so much of a planner when it comes to travelling, and neither are my friends who are travelling with me, so we just planned it very loosely. I think trips are so much more fun when there’s some room for improvisation.

I’ll set aside my excitement for this trip for my next blog, and show you the pictures I took during my previous trips around Shanghai. There's a lot...
 
My first trip to Wujiaochang, the nearest downtown area from Fudan and where the subway station is.

Shanghai French Concession


Buildings of Shanghai French Concession seen from the Bund(Waitan)

Alex, Ashley, and me (the Gamecocks) on the Bund!

The Bund - you can see the famous Pearl Tower and the "Can Opener Building"


Me with the Bund Bull made by the same artist of the Wall Street Bull

The Old City of Shanghai - a very touristy area not too far from the Bund

In the Old City, Alex and I tried the weird dumplings that you suck the fishy juice out of with a straw...

More view of the Old City of Shanghai at night

A faraway view of the Peal Tower lit up at night


Eating huoguo (hot pot) with Alex at a restaurant near school. We got free beer for being foreigners!

One of the nicest clubs in Shanghai. It's supposed to be only for stockholders but club promoters let foreigners (mainly white people) in and give free drinks.

Yes, the club also has a huge tank with sharks.

And the drinks there are ridiculously expensive if you were to buy them.

A trip to another downtown area near Zhongshan Park subway station. Some of the buildings were massive and stunning.


Went to see the world-famous acrobatic show at Shanghai Center Theatre! They were simply amazing. Someone told me if you haven't seen them perform, then you haven't seen Shanghai.


Had another type of huoguo (hot pot) with people from my Marketing club. It was delicious but expensive! I forgot to take a picture, but this restaurant offered free manicure and board games for people waiting to eat there.

The rest of the pictures were taken at Tianzifang--an arts and crafts enclave with a unique atmosphere. The streets there were full of small shops and good restaurants. It's my favorite place in Shanghai so far!











The map of Tianzifang. The place is not that big so you can look around the whole place in less than an hour.

Monday, March 17, 2014

School Life!


First of all, I want to apologize for the late post. For some reason, I couldn’t get the VPN to work so I couldn’t get on my blog page. Now it’s working again, so here goes my second post in Shanghai.

Tip 1: Yes, some websites don’t work in China without a VPN because of the censorship. Thankfully, USC students can use the school’s VPN for free. Just search for VPN on USC’s website and you’ll be able to download it! (If it doesn’t work on the first time, try a few more times because that’s what I had to do.)

It’s already been a month since I arrived in Shanghai. Shanghai is very lively and interesting, and it makes me sad that I’m only here for one semester. Although I have so much to share about the city, I’m going to leave that for the next blog and first tell you about how the school’s going for me.

Now that I’m free from being stressed out about course registration, I am appreciating how big and nice the campus is. Four of my classes are in the building called Guanghua—precisely it’s two tall towers linked together. It’s one of the newest buildings on campus where many foreign exchange students have their classes. It’s about a fifteen minute walk from the international student dorms, which is located in the farthest north side of the campus.
 
The massive Guanghua Building

 The statue of Mao on campus.


 There are cats everywhere on the campus.



On Mondays I have two classes on the southern campus, and it takes me about 20-25 minutes by walking. Unlike Guanghua, other “teaching buildings” are pretty old looking. Especially the restrooms are very old and traditional. Although I’m from Korea and was used to squat toilets, these buildings took it to a whole new level and made it one long connected squat toilet. My Chinese friend said even she has only seen these kinds in really rural areas.
 
  Just in case you were having a hard time picturing it.
 
 
 
Most students ride their bikes to class and many students also have electric scooters. I don’t have a bike or an electric scooter but I like riding in the back of them. The bikes have a “back seat” so lots of people bike around with another person sitting in the back. Since there are so many population riding bikes and scooters, you need to be very careful to not get hit by one.

Tip 2: If you are going to purchase a bike, it is better to get a secondhand one, because bikes get stolen very often. It is also good to get at least two locks.

All my classes are taught in English, and I am mostly satisfied with them. Many of my classes are in the late evening though, and all except my Chinese class are taught only once a week, so the classes go on for 2 or 3 hours. It’s weird being in class until 8 or 9pm, but I guess that’s better than having 8am classes.

Although most of my classes have only a handful of—or sometimes none—Chinese students, my Organizational Behavior course has about 80 Chinese students. It all depends on the subject and whether it is a required course for them or not. Even if there are not many Chinese students in class, it is interesting to hear their perspectives on some of the issues that come up during class. Also, since Fudan receives exchange students from varies countries, you get to be in an extremely internationalized classroom, sharing ideas and thoughts with students from all over the world. It’s an awesome experience that you can’t easily get in South Carolina.

One thing I want to say before I move on: be prepared for some frustration. I have to admit, the first few weeks here was quite…challenging. I didn’t like the fact that I had so little information about how the school system worked here. There was an orientation for business exchange students but it was held in the second week of school. The class registration process was very difficult because of some technological issues and because I could not get in contact with my advisor at USC during the registration period.

Nevertheless, it is important to remember that you need to be on top of things, making sure you get all the information you need. Don’t be hesitant to ask questions to the coordinator at Fudan and to offices at USC, and if they can’t help, ask other students until you get all the answers you need. You’re expected to find out and solve lots of things on your own. Although the idea can be scary, it’s all part of the study abroad experience. If you just ask the right questions to the right people, you will be able to get all the info and help you need. (I hope I didn’t sound too preachy there.)

Tip 3: Fudan University (and probably most other Chinese colleges) has a two-week add/drop period at the beginning of the semester. That’s when the professors don’t take attendance and you can try as many classes as you want.

Outside of class, I have joined two student organizations. One is the school’s international relations organization which I signed up for on the student organization recruiting day. I met a good Chinese-Korean friend named Haewol through the organization. I also joined a Korean Marketing organization, which is a small organization made up of Korean students from all over Shanghai. One benefit from participating in this organization is that I get to travel farther away from Fudan because the meetings are held outside of the school’s district. There are lots of other opportunities open to foreign students if you just look for them. Usually Chinese students are very motivated to learn English, so they would be glad to have English speakers join their clubs.

I'm going to end this post with my favorite drink ever: Coco milk tea with pearl jelly. It's so good I drink it almost every day. I'll be back with more stories about my life in Shanghai!
 
 
 

Sunday, March 2, 2014

How to Settle in Shanghai

How do I even begin this post? There has been so much going on since I’ve landed in Shanghai about ten days ago that it’s almost impossible to talk about them all in one blog post. So I’ll divide them into two posts and upload the second one later this week. This one will be the boring but the most important one that explains how to settle in and prepare for your stay in Shanghai. I’ll include some tips for traveling to China throughout my posts for anyone planning on studying abroad in China, especially at Fudan University.

My flight to Shanghai was very pleasant. I flew with China Southern Airlines from Incheon Airport to Pudong Airport and it cost only about 400 US dollars including tax. It was a student ticket so I got to check three 25kg bags. Most wonderfully, I had three seats to myself because the plane was half empty. They also provided a good lunch even though the flight was only for two hours. I would definitely say it was the best flight experience in my life.

Pudong International Airport was surprisingly very big and very clean. At the airport, I ran into a Korean girl who was going near Fudan University. We decided to take a taxi together and got in the line where several taxies were lined up to pick customers up. I was glad she spoke good Chinese and knew exactly where to find a taxi, because apparently some bad taxi drivers wait outside the airport for foreign customers and rip them off.

Tip 1: If you ever take a taxi from Pudong to Fudan University, make sure it’s a legit one with a machine that calculates your cost by traveling distance and time. The ride should cost you about 200RMB and you don’t need to tip the driver. To get to the foreign student dormitory, tell the driver “Fudan Daxue, Wudonglu Wuchuanlu,” or have the address written in Chinese (复旦大学、武东路、武川路).

Tip 2: Don’t panic if you can’t understand a word Chinese people are saying even though you have studied Chinese at USC for some time. Just expect that not many taxi drivers can speak English and they usually won’t talk slowly for you. Same goes for the people working at the front desk downstairs at the main dorm. It’s stressful at first, but you’ll learn the language more quickly.

I arrived safely at the main dorm building where I would be staying at for the semester. I paid 200RMB for deposit and 100RMB for electricity at the front desk, although I had already paid 800RMB online for dormitory deposit when I was booking my room before I got to China. Then I got my room card and my electricity card. If you live in the main building, you don’t need to pay for water but you do need to pay for electricity separately using the prepaid card and keep reloading it when the money runs out.

Exchange students needed to go through some processes of registering, paying the dorm fee in full, buying insurance, and changing your visa status if needed. They were all done on the first floor of the main dorm building. Although USC made me pay for study abroad insurance, Fudan had its own policy for insurance, so I had to pay another 300RMB for the one it required.

Tip 3: When choosing your room, always try to pick one facing the south(南向) because its much warmer and quieter than a north facing one. Some people have told me that choosing an upper floor is a good idea because there’s less pollution. I chose the 5th floor just because I didn’t want to be in the elevator for too long.
 
My room before I put the two beds together because my roommate never arrived.
(Excuse the mess. I was still moving in.)

The rest of my room. There is a bathroom facing the closet.


The view from my room. Every room has a balcony.

The view of the city from an upper floor in the main dorm.


After moving in, I went downstairs to the shop on the first floor to get internet connection and wireless router. The shop was like a convenient store with almost all things necessary for living at the dorm. There I paid 80RMB (per month) for the faster internet and bought an ethernet cord and a wireless router. You can ask them to set the router up for you if you can’t do it yourself, but the Chinese instruction manual is pretty easy to follow.

Tip 4: Don’t throw away the receipt that they give you for the internet connection. When you tear the side and see the second page, it has the password for internet on it.

Next step was getting a prepaid SIM card for my phone. Most smartphones work with Chinese SIM cards, which are easy to buy on streets. You first need to contact your service provider at home to unlock the phone for international use. The SIM card sellers can try to rip you off too, so be aware. I’m not sure how much I paid for mine, but I think the cheapest ones start from 50RMB. The plan I got was one with 500MB 3G a month, which cost 36RMB per month, plus .15RMB every minute for calling within Shanghai and .1RMB for every text message. They would all be taken out from my 100RMB deposit on my prepaid SIM card, which I will have to reload when it runs out of money.
 

The package of the SIM card I bought


Tip 5: If your phone wouldn’t send texts when you put in the Chinese SIM card, try logging on their website and registering. I had to get a help from someone who can understand Chinese for this one.

Tip 6: If your phone doesn’t connect to 3G, try setting your APN. (I only know the details for Android phones)
Go to Settings -> System -> Wireless & Networks -> Mobile Networks -> Access Point Names.
Press the menu button then press “New APN.”

Use one of the following that works for your phone.

1)      Name: Type anything you want

APN: uninet

Save

2)      Name: Type anything you want

APN: cmnet

Save

3)      Name: Type anything you want

APN: cmnet (or cmwap)

MMSC: mmsc.monternet.com

MMS Proxy: 10.0.0.172

Save

4)      Name: Type anything you want

APN: 3gnet

MCC: 460

MNC: 01

Save

I hope my stories and tips helped getting the basic things set up for life in China. One more thing, try to arrive in Shanghai a few days before school starts to give yourself some time to figure things out. Knowing that you have enough time to solve your problems and get things set up really helps you not to freak out or make bad decisions such as buying low quality high price goods.