Nuances of Culture
The kids saw me for the first 3 days after I had returned to Moldova and then I disappeared for 2 weeks. One asked Svetlana where I was and another kid answered that I didn’t like Moldova and had left. These kids are sensitive to anything that feeds their inferiority complex. They interpret the visiting English speakers as leaving because they don’t like Moldova. When I announce that I am leaving to take care of business in the States, they want reassurance about when I will return.
One of the more advanced students, an adult, asked me again (for the 4th time) what I was doing in Moldova when I had the resources to go anywhere in the world. I gave her the same answer as the previous times. I am here by choice. She still won’t accept that answer. There is an embedded belief that everything is better elsewhere, particularly in the West. I have tried to tell them that they are starting a new country, put in the effort to get it right, but they feel hopeless against the system of corruption. I tried the line of doing it to improve the lifestyle of their grandchildren but then they reply that they would like to improve their own lifestyles and I can’t disagree with that.
I follow an internet feed called Quorum in which people pose a question and it is answered by individuals from all over the world. Someone asked if it was better to go to medical school in Moldova, Ukraine, Belarus or Russia. All 50 replies said not to go to medical school in Eastern Europe as the degree was not recognized anywhere in the western world and there were no jobs in their countries. It wasn’t worth the effort.
I think people are becoming accustomed to me as a foreigner. I am hearing more discussion about sending the kids to university in the West where the degree is worth something because the university system in Moldova is corrupt. Apparently, one bribes the professor with cash before the exam or you will fail, regardless of how well you know the material. I have only heard stories like this, of parents bribing the teacher for good grades, from Saudi Arabia. I suppose now we can add the States after hearing of the admission scandals involving the elite universities. Except for donating money for a new building with the expectation of benefits for their offspring, our system is more transparent and if you are caught the penalties will be harsh.
I believe the difference is the West has a more level playing field than the East and that has been evolving since the signing of the Magna Carta. The corruption is a legacy of the Soviet system and its beaurocracy. The question is how to clean up the establishment of these countries peacefully, without beheading a few heads of state.
If these kids are going to foreign universities then they need to speak almost native English because it is the language of instruction. There is an American sponsored program of high school exchanges. A select number of students go to a home in the States for 1 year and return speaking native English. They are then more likely to get into Western universities. However, they all take ‘soft subjects’, for example international studies where they are essentially networking and complaining of the stressful academic load of 5 hours of lectures a week! Am I just making it easier for the better students to leave the country? I dunno. Back to work
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