Pre-departure Orientation (PDO) + NSLI-Y Goals

Pre-departure Orientation (PDO) + NSLI-Y Goals


안녕하세요 여러분! 저는 드디어 한국에 도착했어요. 오늘은 격리 11일 이에요. 힘든데 끝은 거의 다 왔어요! ^^

Hello everybody! I’ve finally arrived in Korea, and I am in day 11 of my 2-week isolated quarantine. It’s tough, but the end is almost here! 😀

With the start of our in-person NSLI-Y experience just around the corner, I wanted to recap my journey traveling to Korea and the brief but wonderful memories made at Pre-departure Orientation (PDO) in San Francisco. I’ll also share the main goals I plan to achieve during NSLI-Y.

Departure to Pre-Departure Orientation: EUG ➜ SFO

My 1.5 hour flight from Eugene, OR, to San Francisco was scheduled for the morning, but a serendipitous 3-hour delay allowed me to enjoy a salmon & lox toast breakfast from a local restaurant called Lovely! After checking my bags (NSLI-Y covered 1 checked bag for the domestic flight), bidding my parents farewell, and going through security, I enjoyed a smooth flight spent marveling at the scenery from my window seat. The only hiccup was dropping my water bottle on some poor fellow while putting my backpack in the stowaway. 😅 Here are my takeaways from the domestic flight:

  • At least for United flights, if you sit in the frontmost row of the plane and don’t have a seat in front of you, you have to put your backpack (or other item you plan to keep by your feet) in the stowaway like a carryon.
  • Be careful putting items in the overhead! Make sure all unsealed pockets, such as the water bottle pockets on the sides of backpacks, are empty so no loose items can slip out.
  • Store your passport, wallet, cell phone, and other most valuable belongings in a small purse/fanny pack/other wearable bag on the front of your body. I’d exclusively worn backpacks prior to this trip, but it was SO much easier accessing all these frequently used valuables from a purse. Purses also make it easier for you to check that your most important items are all there and harder for people to steal those items.

PDO in San Francisco

PDO is a short multi-day session where our cohort gets to know each other, learn basic language phrases, and establish goals for the program. Because our cohort had 4 multi-hour virtual PDO sessions prior to our in-person PDO, we came into our COVID-modified in-person PDO having already covered program rules, safety, and behavioral expectations.

Due to COVID-19, the organized activities we did have occurred either outdoors or via Zoom from our hotel rooms. (A picture of our detailed schedule is above!) This left us with lots of free time to walk around and explore the area independently. The smaller city near San Francisco where we stayed had a lovely central park and community garden, as well as many cute restaurants and boba places like Uni Souffle!

In terms of the travel and transportation experience, the Better World staff greeted me upon my arrival at San Francisco at the baggage claim. (Better World is the implementing organization in Korea that organizes our classes and cultural activities in Korea, while iEARN-USA is the implementing organization in the U.S. that organizes PDO, our flights, and other domestic activities.)

We rode in a shuttle bus for NSLI-Y students to the hotel from SFO, and again in a shuttle from the hotel to SFO when we departed to Korea. Talking with my awesome NSLI-Y seatmates and taking intermittent stretch breaks (that definitely did not become indoor gatherings 😉) helped make the 12-hour flight quite fun and not at all painful.

Here are my takeaways from the international flight:

  • If you can, sit next to interesting people whom you can talk to for hours! (:
  • Checking in 2 bags is free for United international flights, and doing so is a good idea because it reduces the number of items you need to worry about on the airplane.
  • Especially if you have difficulty stomaching airplane food, consider eating something palatable from the airplane prior to departure. My tonkatsu from the airport saved me 🍲

Getting to travel across the world and meet 35 incredible human beings from across the country in-person was pretty euphoric. After a year and a half of the pandemic’s social restrictions, I couldn’t have been more grateful to meet so many new friends and visit so many places in such a short period of time — all without the fear of getting COVID since we all tested negative and were almost all fully vaccinated!

NSLI-Y Goals

Lastly, because a major component of PDO is about setting expectations for our NSLI-Y experience, I wanted to share the goals I plan to work towards throughout this summer!

1. Korean Language:

  • During NSLI-Y, have at least 1 no-English day per week
  • Reach intermediate level (ideally intermediate-mid or above) on post-program OPI
  • Be able to hold an substantive conversation for at least 20 minutes
  • Begin being able to discuss abstract topics and opinions
  • Write a blog post entirely in Korean

2. Host Family:

  • Proactively reach out to make meaningful connections with all members of host family
  • Learn to cook at least 1 Korean dish with my family
  • Connect my home family with my host family at least once via call and use translation skills to facilitate a conversation
  • Become best friends with my host 남동생 and improve my skills with kids
  • Perform flute at least once for my host family
  • Discover what things connect us across linguistic and cultural barriers

3. Culture:

  • Learn strategies for cultivating meaningful cultural exchange, friendship, and understanding in my community (especially through The World in Us’s programs happening this summer and beyond!)
  • Learn to cook at least 3 Korean meals
  • See firsthand whether all the fascinating facets and dichotomies I’ve observed about Korea from an outsider perspective through media are actually true IRL
  • Learn the policies behind Korea’s rapid industrialization & behind what makes modern Seoul so pretty/perfect/shiny to outsiders, as well as the reality of struggles + social pressures everyday Koreans face
  • Learn how globalization affects and is perceived by Koreans
  • Learn how America is perceived by Koreans and how that perception can be improved
  • Learn how Korea’s presidential primaries + campaign processes work and are perceived by everyday Koreans, as well as how these processes compare to those in America
  • Understand the broad points of Korea’s political structure and history (especially from the 1900s onward)
  • Be able to facilitate meaningful conversations and lessons about Korean culture + my broader study abroad experience with peers/mentors/kids at home

4. Bucket List (things to do before leaving)

  • Eat LOTS of Korean food
  • Visit cute cafes and become regulars at one where we can be buddies with the baristas💖
  • Read (and comprehend) children’s books at the library
  • Visit the DMZ, Coex Library, 경복궁, Lotte World, Han River, & Namsan Tower
  • Go shopping/eating in Myeongdong & Hongdae
  • Go hiking and visit parks
  • Experience the city + take walks + gain creative inspiration for writing

With that, those are my goals for NSLI-Y and my experience with PDO and travel! 다음에 봐요!


오늘의 노래 (Song of the Day)

(오늘은 너무 피곤하고 바빠서 한국어 부품 없어요. ㅜㅜ 근데 매일 한국어 수업에서 열심히공부하고 연습하고 있어요!)

shoutout to co-author Javon 😉

NSLI-Y Korean: The Journey Begins!

NSLI-Y Korean: The Journey Begins!

On April 6, 12:50 pm, I got the email — the email that had me stalking every NSLI-Y Discord, Facebook, and College Confidential channel at 2 am and relentlessly refreshing my email when I should’ve been paying attention to my oh-so-riveting Zoom classes. Yes, that was the moment when the NSLI-Y gods notified me of my acceptance to their in-person Korean summer program!

Don’t know much about NSLI-Y? Scroll to the bottom of the post for a brief primer on what it is, or visit nsliforyouth.org!

After a bout of collective familial screaming and mild confusion from my teacher as to why I had left my “Join Breakout Room” invitation untouched, I settled down enough to process the email’s contents. After an in-person Pre-Departure Orientation in mid-June in San Francisco, during which I will meet other NSLI-Y finalists and learn about program expectations, I will spend 7 weeks studying Korean in Seoul, South Korea.

Receiving a NSLI-Y scholarship any year would be cause for elation, but my acceptance this year felt especially miraculous. Amidst COVID-19, NSLI-Y was forced to cancel in-person summer programs for all but two countries, South Korea and Taiwan — and the two language programs I’d applied to happened to be Korean (my 1st choice) and Chinese (my 2nd choice). However, finalists for these languages could be placed in either in-person abroad programs or virtual programs.

I would’ve been incredibly thankful for any finalist program placement, of course, but being named an in-person finalist brought me more joy and gratification than I could’ve imagined. It justified the hours I’d spent toiling over my essays, pestering the (very kind and patient) NSLI-Y alumni of LinkedIn for advice, preparing for my interview, and bingeing every NSLI-Y vlog on the face of YouTube.

Moreover, like most human beings, I’d been famished for good news and desperate for a morsel of hope, for something to look forward to after surviving a literally hellish year. Needless to say, NSLI-Y delivered just that. I’m still shocked at how serendipitous I’ve been in everything from me selecting Korean as my first choice to NSLI-Y working their butts off to ensure a safe in-person program would be possible.

I’m endlessly grateful for this opportunity and all the puzzle pieces that had to fall into place for it to even be feasible. NSLI-Y will undoubtedly look different this year — the 14-day quarantine period upon arriving in Korea, for one, will be interesting. Nonetheless, I can’t wait to immerse myself in a beautiful language and culture, forge cross-cultural friendships with youth from around the world, and embark on this amazing journey!


Wait, what even is NSLI-Y?

For those unfamiliar, NSLI-Y stands for National Security Language Initiative for Youth and is a fully-funded study abroad scholarship from the U.S. Department of State. Through NSLI-Y, high schoolers can intensively study Chinese, Hindi, Indonesian, Korean, Persian, Russian, or Turkish (8 less frequently taught but critically needed languages for Americans) for either a summer or academic year. As the website explains, NSLI-Y “provides overseas critical language study opportunities to American youth through merit-based scholarships to spark a lifetime interest in critical foreign languages and cultures.”


한국어 부품 (Korean Part)

In which I flex my delightfully underdeveloped Korean skills. Corrections are more than welcome! I also don’t really know how to spell or space words (or whether commas are used differently/less frequently than in English?), so… please help ㅜㅜ 도와주세요! ㅜㅜ

사월 육일있었어요. 화요일 있었어요, 그래서 학요에 있었어요. 그런데 열두시 오십분에, NSLI-Y가 저한테 이메일을 보냈어요. 저는 NSLI-Y 장학금을 받았어요! 진짜, 너무 행복했어요!

지금도 아직 노무 행복해요. 이월뒤에 저는 한국에 갈 거예요. 와!

오늘의 노래 (Song of the Day)

In which I share a song reflecting my current mood/life developments, because I suffer from the extremely common affliction of thinking my music taste should be universally appreciated and adored

NSLI-Y 때문에, 저는 행복해요. 춤추하고 싶어요! 그리고 이 노래는 “Waltz” 이라고 합니다. Waltz 춤이에요 ㅋㅋㅋㅋ

(Translation: Because of NSLI-Y, I am happy. I want to dance! And this song is called “Waltz.” The Waltz is a dance. lolololol)

Believe it or not, those stylistic (and probably grammatical) disasters of Korean sentences required the entirety of my 0.5 brain cells — so please do send feedback, corrections, study tips/resources, etc. in the comments or directly to me! And stay tuned for my next post about my pre-program language goals and study plan 😀