
Haley Herbig
International Relations and Political Science, 鈥17
I spent a year in Ulsan, South Korea in 2015. I didn鈥檛 know any Korean when I got there and was the only American at the university for the first semester. I got a scholarship to study abroad but part of the scholarship is that you have to take a language course. The first course I didn鈥檛 do too hot in. For the second semester, I took a more intensive course on the language. The professors were a lot more helpful so I did much better. Their grammar is completely different. It鈥檚 a lot harder to learn than Chinese and I鈥檝e learned Chinese.
I still keep in touch with the first two people I met in Korea, Simon and John, who met me at the airport when I first arrived. We were like the three musketeers when I was there. If you have really close friends that are older than you, as a girl, you call them 鈥渙ppa,鈥 which means 鈥渙lder brother.鈥 So I always called them 鈥渙ppa.鈥 I was pretty fluent in Korean by the time I left there.
Why 海外吃瓜?
I liked it and how campus was smaller than most places I visited. I thought it was great how the professors were willing to sit down and talk with you. I learn better that way rather than a giant group or class.
Haley ended up at 海外吃瓜 by way of both Seattle, Washington, and Fort Worth, Texas. She is a member of the Philalethean Society. She is enrolled overseas once again to pursue her master's degree in International Relations, though she鈥檚 keeping the school a secret until graduation.