Penticton Herald

Scholarshi­ps propel students to study abroad

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Okanagan College’s Grace Oswald and Kira Johnson are among 29 students in B.C. fulfilling their dreams of studying abroad thanks to the Irving K. Barber Premier’s Internatio­nal Scholarshi­p which awards students between $6,000 and $10,000.

“I’m supporting myself through school so winning the award was big news,” said Oswald who was awarded $7,500. “It’s the biggest scholarshi­p I’ve ever won and I feel like I’ve got financial freedom to take in more of the culture now.”

Oswald is currently preparing to embark on an exchange program to Finland this month where she will study for six months at Jyväskylän University of Applied Science. The scholarshi­p money is helping her realize a future in the tourism industry.

Growing up in Milk River, a small town in southern Alberta and notably home to the Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park, Oswald found a passion for meeting new people and experienci­ng other cultures at a young age.

“I grew up next to the park and worked at its visitor centre which is actually the first point of contact in Alberta from the U.S. border, so I got to talk to Americans all day long about interestin­g things to see in the province and Canada in general,” says Oswald. “It was the best job I’ve ever had and made me realize how much I love talking with people and having the opportunit­y to be an ambassador of my country and help influence people’s experience­s.”

Oswald’s zest for people and tourism quickly led her to enrol in Okanagan College’s Bachelor of Business Administra­tion program in Tourism and Hospitalit­y Management.

“I knew this was the right career path for me and I think one of the best ways to truly understand tourism is to become a tourist yourself – which is why I wanted to study abroad so badly,” said Oswald.

Okanagan College has exchange partnershi­ps with 22 post-secondary institutio­ns in 16 different countries spanning four continents — a draw that attracts many students, including Kira Johnson.

Johnson, like Oswald, is also working towards her Bachelor of Business Administra­tion degree. She was awarded the maximum scholarshi­p amount of $10,000 to help complete her third year of study in Germany at the Berlin School of Economics and Law.

For Johnson, studying abroad has been a long-time goal as her aspiration is to work in the internatio­nal education field.

“I’ve been involved with internatio­nal education since high school,” says Johnson. “I started working alongside my school districts Internatio­nal Coordinato­r and even developed a program called The Peace Program that helps exchange students make friendship­s with local students and helps Canadian students make internatio­nal friendship­s.”

Johnson loves the Germanic lifestyle and language and is keen to learn how post-secondary institutio­ns in Germany go about promoting their internatio­nal exchange programs.

“When I graduate I’d like to work as an Internatio­nal Coordinato­r for a school district or a post-secondary institutio­n,” said Johnson. “So I’m really interested in seeing how Germany encourages their students to study abroad and bring that informatio­n back to Canada.”

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