Mittwoch, 19. November 2014

The University of Tulsa: What should you know as an International Student? - Part 1

Hey folks,

Today I want to talk about what you should know about coming to the University of Tulsa (TU) as an exchange student. Everything I will write in this first part and the following part describes my experience. Some things might have changed, are generally different for your country/ university or might just not apply to your experience. However, I do hope that this will help you with your decisions, preparations and expectations. 

In this first part, I want to address rather the things that play a role before you actually are in Tulsa. Some of this I already covered in my previous posts, but here I would like to present it to you in a more precise and direct fashion. So let's get started!

As you might know, I study at the University of Siegen. At the University of Siegen you have to apply for the program and once you are nominated to go to Tulsa, it is pretty much set that you are going. That is at least how I understood it. Sadly the information flow from the officials to me about the whole process was not too great. The next step is filling out the TU application. In this application they want to have various things that you most likely already have on hand - an English CV, letter of motivation etc. 

The next step of this application is more about TU itself and helps to prepare everything for your arrival. Here you get the information about the insurance requirements, your vaccination requirements, your course wishes, your arrival details and a few more things. I would strongly advise you to read through ALL of it thoroughly because these are mostly things you need to organize before leaving to the US. Get started on your vaccinations early and talk to your physician. Be aware that some of them might not be covered by your insurance. You should definitely check with your insurance provider. For the insurance: Don't sweat it too much. You do not need to present your insurance information until you arrive there and waiving the insurance of TU is rather easy and online. I personally was freaking out about it without a real reason to. The requirements might change for the upcoming years, but the insurance offered by the ADAC covers pretty much everything and has barely any limits. It is especially handy for members of the ADAC. I paid around 130€ for the 4 month instead of 600$ (whole academic year!) for the insurance for TU. 



Another thing you have to organize before coming is Housing and Dining. There are various options for housing. You can find all the prices and details on the TU website. I personally very much enjoy staying in an apartment compared to a dorm room. The dorm rooms are pretty small, you do not have a kitchen to cook ANYWHERE and you have barely any personal space because you usually share the small dorm rooms with someone else. If you go for an apartment you can just sign up for only the apartments and wait until you’re placed but I would highly recommend you to check out the roommate finder and maybe find an apartment through that. What happened this year, and I don't know if that is how it always is or if it was just his year, was that most of the exchange students ended up living in two bedroom apartments with four people. This basically means dorm rooms but with a kitchen, a living room and two bathrooms. I went on roommate finder and found myself a roommate and an apartment. I’m very happy with that choice. I have my own room, my own bathroom and my own walking closet (dream of every girl or woman!). Before you can be assigned to an apartment you will have to deposit 250$. I did not know about this when I signed up for Tulsa and did not expect this (additional) cost.


There will also be things you will need to buy for your room. Plan that in your budget. ;)


Now Dining is its own thing. If you live in a dorm room and don't have a kitchen you basically need a meal plan and dining dollars. The Caf however is not too fancy. It is decent. Most people are not too happy with it. The breakfast is great however. ;) When you live in an apartment and have your own kitchen, you will need groceries. There is pretty much no possibility to shop for groceries here without a car. So either save up enough to buy a car while you're here or find friends with cars. If you cannot manage either, your last resort is the CaneTransit. Those are shuttles that go off campus to stores like Target and Reasors where you can do your shopping. 

Even with an apartment it is smart to have some dining dollars on your TU ID which works like a credit card. On campus you can use those dining dollars to pay for food. At the Allan Chapman Student Union you can find various fast food accommodations like Pizza Hut, Baja Jacks (Mexican), Sushi, Chick-fil-a or Subway. When you use your TU ID to pay instead of cash or your debit/ credit card you save the sales tax. Sales tax is about 8% in Oklahoma and is generally NOT included in the prizes you see. My guess is that you will eat quite a few times on campus during your stay and not always alone in your apartment. Do not worry though. You do not have to choose an amount of dining dollars before you come. You can still arrange that once you're there or during the semester. I only just recently added some dollars on my card. 

Okay, I think this is already quite a bit of information! If you have any more question regarding these things, please feel free to email me or simply comment. Maybe your question is also interesting for someone else. ;) 

Thank you for reading this post.

Jenny Sch.

P.S. Remeber to get all your prescriptions in order before you leave. You cannot buy contact lenses without a prescription in the US, for example.

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