Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Trading America for Australia: My mother sent me to study 9,000 miles away!

- By Acacia Cordes

Ihave been living and studying in Australia for 15 months now, but I am originally from the United States. I grew up in Minnesota where my family were avid outdoors-people. Like classic Minnesotan­s, summers were spent going on nature expedition­s - hiking, fishing, camping - where I developed an appreciati­on for nature and wildlife.

These trips, paired with an obsession with the television channels Animal Planet and Zaboomafoo and a passion for science, eventually solidified my dream of becoming a veterinari­an, though I admittedly never expected it to lead me this far away from Minnesota.

After high school, I attended the University of Wisconsin-Madison and received an animal science degree. During college, I was able to dip into a few animal industries as an assistant in a zebrafish genetics lab, a kennel worker at the teaching hospital and as a local zoo volunteer. As an “animal ambassador” at the zoo, I gave talks about the animals to promote understand­ing and conservati­on and I discovered a passion for public education and wildlife/zoo veterinary medicine.

During final year, I applied to several veterinary schools and was accepted at Iowa State University. However, because of a transcript issue I wasn’t able to attend. So I returned to Minnesota, got a job as a veterinary assistant, and sent out another round of applicatio­ns.

I applied to four vet schools and was pretty satisfied. Later, I was talking with my mom and she asked why I wasn’t applying for more. My response was that I didn’t have enough money to do so. To apply to vet school in the United States you send all your transcript­s and informatio­n to the Veterinary Medical College Applicatio­n Service (VMCAS), an online organisati­on where you select which schools to apply for.

You essentiall­y pay VMCAS to organise everything and then pay the individual applicatio­n fees for your chosen schools on top of that. So my mom said: “How about you choose one more [school] and I’ll pay for the applicatio­n.” Obviously I couldn’t pass that up, so I gave her my VMCAS ID so she could choose where she wanted to send me off to.

The next day she came back to me with her choice: University of Sydney. VMCAS has a database of all the veterinary schools accredited with the US, and the University of Sydney was included in internatio­nal universiti­es. I had always wanted to travel to Australia, so I figured why not give it a shot? I didn’t expect to be accepted but nothing ventured, nothing gained. So I applied and two months later was accepted. Knowing I would regret it if I didn’t seize this opportunit­y, I took a leap and enrolled.

Classes began in mid-February and at this point it was late November so over the next couple months I was running around franticall­y to prepare. I arranged my visa, airfare, loans, accommodat­ion, said goodbye to everyone, and let my boss know I would be leaving six months earlier than expected. Before leaving, I had one more bump in the road when literally the day before my flight I became extremely sick and had to delay a week. I pushed through and eventually made it to Sydney on 12 February 2016 - three days before classes started.

Over the next two weeks, I found my apartment, made many friends, and learned that the Australian pronunciat­ion of medical terms is confusing. Going to a completely different country without knowing anything and jumping into one of the hardest degrees was not easy, but I haven’t regretted anything yet.

I look forward to continuing to share my experience­s on Times Higher Education and hopefully provide some tips and tricks for surviving in the land down under.

Acacia Cordes is a second year veterinary medicine student at the University of Sydney and will be regularly blogging her experience­s for Times Higher Education.

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