My tearful farewell to my son cast new light on the foreign student ‘industry’

  • 📰 theage
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 29 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 15%
  • Publisher: 77%

Belgique Nouvelles Nouvelles

Belgique Dernières Nouvelles,Belgique Actualités

My son has become an international student. His departure has given me a new perspective on the young people who are temporarily calling Australia home.

I was 22, saying goodbye to my parents at the Sydney international terminal. Suddenly finding his last words, my dad rushed up, grabbed my shoulders, and yelped: “Don’t trustCharacteristically, it didn’t come out as he wanted. In the long time I was away, I wondered what he actually meant. Something about his fears and anxieties, but really a chaotic, semi-coherent expression of love. It was left to me to build a bridge between what he said and what he meant.

Of the 717,500 international students currently in Australia, much is said about the burden they place on housing and jobs, the warp factor they exercise on educational priorities, the commercialising impact they have on universities, and the opportunities they provide for exploiters.

Now, the technology we spend so much time distrusting – the social media platforms, the WhatsApp groups, the smartphone hegemony – is our salvation. Often, thanks to that same technology, separated families talk more than they do when they’re in the same home.

 

Merci pour votre commentaire. Votre commentaire sera publié après examen.
Nous avons résumé cette actualité afin que vous puissiez la lire rapidement. Si l'actualité vous intéresse, vous pouvez lire le texte intégral ici. Lire la suite:

 /  🏆 8. in BE

Belgique Dernières Nouvelles, Belgique Actualités

Similar News:Vous pouvez également lire des articles d'actualité similaires à celui-ci que nous avons collectés auprès d'autres sources d'information.

The true scale of Australia's international student industry — in four chartsThe international education market is big business, particularly in Australia. As the government moves forward with the most significant crackdown on the sector in decades, we take a look at just how massive the industry really is.
La source: abcnews - 🏆 5. / 83 Lire la suite »

Growing Australia: how a refugee from Iran helped expand the pistachio industryMehran Mahdavi is among the many migrants whose skills and knowledge transformed our horticulture industry – and taste buds
La source: GuardianAus - 🏆 1. / 98 Lire la suite »

Australia's food manufacturing industry worries rising costs will push supermarkets to use more importsYou may be eating Australian-grown food that has been processed overseas and then shipped back again. Local food manufacturers worry they will struggle to compete with imports among price-conscious consumers.
La source: abcnews - 🏆 5. / 83 Lire la suite »