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- My name is Lulu Nkwanzi.
I am an international student from Zambia
at The University of Queensland.
My degree is commerce and
law and I'm in my third year.
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So this is my office.
I am the 2018 International
Student Officer
for the university's union.
And the student union is just a body that,
a representational body for students.
So my role is to advocate for students,
international students in particular
and just be the voice for them on campus
when it comes to issues and
problems that they may face.
This semester I'm currently working on
a project called speak
out where we are trying
to increase the international student
representation on campus.
So international students struggle
with so many different
issues and we trying
to understand those from their perspective
and then get them to
directly tell stakeholders
on campus like the staff members,
the vice chancellors and yes just increase
the international
representation on campus.
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So this is the main refractory
where you have all the food places
or where you see all your familiar faces
because you know, all your
friends might not take
the same courses as you,
so we all kind of meet
here and hang out and eat.
And the other great thing
is the Union provides
or has a store here for food
and that's where you get
like to cheapest fries,
the cheapest chicken
and anything on campus
you kind of get it from here.
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(mumbles) lakes, where a lot of students
just come to hang out again,
it's one of those quiet spots in uni
and campus except with
all the animals around.
There's ducks, there's turtles
and sometimes people see eels in the water
but yeah, it's a great spot.
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There so many opportunities
to grow on campus
if you're into
entrepreneurship, like I am.
There's behind me the Ilab
where you get support for your idea
or business project and
you get to understand
kind of all the nitty gritties you have to
get through to run a business.
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This is the law library
where all the law classes happen
and also has great study
spots for students.
It's one the most popular
libraries on campus currently
because it recently got renovated.
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What I love about my course is
we don't always have
the big lecture styles.
We branch off to smaller classes
and we have seminars, sometimes
that we do reflections
that are handwritten and I
love to do those sometimes
because you're going off reading about
the topic you've never heard about before
and then you know you come back to have
an in-depth discussion with other students
and lecturers that had
maybe a very different
perspective from you
and I feel I learn more
by that than just getting
the textbook knowledge
and doing homework, it's
more hands-on and practical.
And the other side of things is
the facilities like the computer rooms
and just the libraries,
they're amazing facilities
that I always use.
I once took this course
called law and society
and it was one of the
best courses I've taken
as a first year course
because we really explored
what it meant to be a lawyer
and the different angles,
the different approaches
that we argue cases or
argue just in general.
We also explored what kind of lawyer
you'd want to be in the future.
So it was really really
interesting to know
that there isn't just that one stereotype
or one I guess career paths
that you could go into.
So that we had a whole
course that talked to us
and just helped us explore
that different side
of the whole course in general program.
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I think perfectly suited
for somebody that is
passionate about advocacy
as well as business.
I like to describe myself as
a business oriented advocate.
So as much as I love the law,
I don't always picture
myself in the future
going to court and arguing cases.
I also, I'm very interested
in passionate about business.
And in my career, my future
I'm hoping to get into consultancy.
So as a business oriented advocate,
I'd have the benefit of knowing the law
and in the training that we do,
we're always trained to think differently
and look at just not one road
that's maybe the obvious one.
We're always told to think
about the other side,
think about the alternatives.
And at the same time with
the commerce side of things,
it's interesting because
you get a hands-on approach
with business information systems,
with technology side of things,
accounting and financing, investing.
So, again I describe that my course is
perfectly suited for somebody that is
passionate about both
business and advocacy.
And maybe not law itself but advocacy
just wanting to be a voice for people
that don't have a voice
or wanting to really push
an idea or a business.
I think this course is perfectly
suited for that person.
My advice is to I guess focus more
or be prepared for second year.
So in the first year of university
everybody is excited because you know,
you've done your research,
you've done your homework
about what the course
would really be about.
So even when you're going and taking
those foundation classes,
you're like oh yes I've heard about this,
oh I know a bit about this.
But in that second year
you start to really know
the difference between
you being in that course
and somebody that has no
idea about the course.
And that transition is a big challenge.
So my advice is to look out for that year
because it could really throw you off
if you continue to assume that you know,
your research is everything
that the program is about.
The course is pretty long
and it gets pretty detailed.
So my advice is to stay on top of things
and not to relax just
after your first year
you feel like, I've heard about this
I'm familiar about this.
It gets a bit more
challenging as you go on
but it's still manageable
if you're ready for it.
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