Tuesday 23 October 2007

Initiation

It's been a month since I last posted on the blog. In some ways, I had expected this to happen; however, before moving to Oxford I had been determined to find the time to keep updating the blog. Guess I was wrong. I knew the one-year programme would be extremely demanding - I just hadn't imagined the magnitude to which this would be true.

To let you all catch up, here's briefly what has transpired over the last 4 weeks:

I arrived at Oxford on the 24th of September, and spent the next full week making all necessary arrangements - ID cards; college registration; bank account and loan; moving in to my new flat; and meeting up with people I was going to be spending the next one year with. So far, so good.

Week 0 started with a bang - 2 full days of orientation, but then three days off to take care of any remaining formalities. Explanation: in Oxford, each term is divided into 'weeks', starting at week zero and finishing at week ten, when the exams for the term are conducted. Week 1 is when the term, and classes, start in real earnest.

Week 1 started on the 8th of October - and straight away we knew we were in the thick of it. Lectures, pre-lecture reading, post-lecture reading, homework, career and personality sessions, CV preparation...I was already having 18 hr days - with 15 hrs spent each day in school. The library became, indeed has become, my second home. Subjects I have never studied before - Finance, Financial Reporting, Decision Science...were being taught at an unbelievable pace. The one-year programme has its draw-backs, and one of them is the rapidity with which new topics are covered. We are supposedly covering in one week what 2-year programmes cover in three. There is relatively little time to grasp and internalise new fundamentals, and by the time you have mulled over and understood one, the lecturer has moved on, leaving you completely in the dark about the issue being discussed now. On top of all this, we are already having to complete group assignments - assignments that would take 2-3 hrs when done individually are taking 10-12 because of group dynamics. It is a part of the learning curve, though, and I am certain we will be able to optimise this soon enough.

Week 1 was chaotic, stressful, and extremely demanding. Gradually, I began to get used to the routine, and the beginning of week 2 was a lot more relaxed. Then towards the end of week 2 I began to realise that I couldn't possibly keep up with the pace of the teaching, and the stress closed down on me again.

We are now in the middle of week 3, and I am beginning to relax, just a little bit, again. Our next assignment is due in about 8 days, so we have a day or two before we need to get back into high gear. I guess these swings are going to become a part of life here.

Whatever happens, one this is for sure - it is going to be a very interesting year ahead. And I had thought we would be able to party as hard as we worked.....!

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