j4: (hair)
j4 ([personal profile] j4) wrote2005-09-15 05:15 pm
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Sad emails...


... say so much, about hopes and dreams and education and privilege and the uselessness of what I do for a living. Emails like this are probably the most depressing thing to fall into the webmaster inbox:

Dear : sir
Im so pleased for corresponding you , I hope to having your consideration , I appreciate your effort ... time as to help me . Really will be so kind if I have excelent opportunityat your standard academic . So Iog on the web site and again asked for scholarship , therefore Isubmitted before this an application under term ( MT 2005 .. No xxxxxxxx .... ID No xxxxxxxxx .... under course MA in Applied Linguistic ) . But unfortunately I held back , for too much competition , Could you please considering me .
According to my knoweldge your University is intersted in education , which encourage me to write to you .So I change my course to ( MA in Communication & Negotiation ) .
Excuse me to intrduce my self ; Im from Darfour State ... El Fasher City ; I graduated and I have BA in English Language & Litrature .Thereby , for current position my country side is badly needs of interaction learners ; becuse to foucs on peace and a ccomplished communication . Even through African country ; with consultants ...awerness proposition .Could you please reply my situation ... I need fully
thankyou for your time ...... Miss K------


And all I can do is point her at the relevant clauses in the Graduate Studies Prospectus and, if I really want to drive the point home, end the email with our standard boilerplate "Thank you for your interest in the University of Cambridge." Sorry, but we've just shattered your dreams. Have a nice day.

[identity profile] atommickbrane.livejournal.com 2005-09-15 04:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh I get a load of those through being our 'webmaster' as well haha, I'm afraid I am far less sympathetic and I dump them as spam as they're often cc-ed to other made up addresses eg angel@ucl.com seems to be quite popular; baffling.
ext_22879: (Default)

[identity profile] nja.livejournal.com 2005-09-15 05:41 pm (UTC)(link)
I found this sort of thing quite disheartening when I was sent out to recruitment fairs in Mexico a few years ago. I'd have terrific, enthusiastic conversations with kids who were desperate to come to the UK to study, and they had looked at the literature and were really up for it, and then right at the end of the conversation would be "and you have scholarships?". At that point I'd wearily gesture towards the British Council stand and say "no, but you could try over there", knowing that there was no way they could make it to the UK without a scholarship and no way they'd get one. Overseas students = cash cows, though universities are reluctant to put that in their advertising. There was one woman who had driven a hundred miles to Guadalajara, and had her heart set on doing a particular MSc, to the point of having decided which hall of residence she was going to live in and was asking me about local volleyball teams, then the dreaded question of scholarships arose. Then I came back to the UK and all the spotty English kids who are doing degrees they aren't much interested in because, well, no particular reason but you have to do something, don't you?

Yes, they do

[identity profile] vinaigrettegirl.livejournal.com 2005-09-15 07:56 pm (UTC)(link)
It's knowing the truth of what's going on in Darfur which informs even more sadness.

I confess that I used to write privately to such people - as I got only about a dozen of thos letters a year at most - with a list of more attainable goals and places they could aim for: anything from British Council short courses in the country's capital city to summer courses here, or even applying for PGCE places not at Poxford or Ambridge but at the then-polys. If something came of it for them, so much the better.

Some of these letters do get written by people's supervisors, though; I have experience of someone who came to a place I have known well who had no English at all, and got in effectively by 100% deception. Pitiable, pitiable, but he stayed here; and the programme which originally got him in folded entirely thereafter because of him.

If she's really on your mind (and why not?) maybe you could do some behind-the-scenes cross referencing and see if the field officers working there for Oxfam might at least be able to give her a job. Bung her details to Oxfam HQ here in Oxford; you just never know.

It is horrible.

Not impossible

[identity profile] anat0010.livejournal.com 2005-09-16 02:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Where there is a will ...
Ok its difficult to get a scholarship, but not impossible, and its a hell of a lot easier with the internet than previously. There are scholarships out there, they may be hard to get, a single one may not cover all fees and living expenses for a course.
http://www.acu.ac.uk/enquiries/lib_enq_afrawards.html
is a place to start. Lots of persistance is required, plus the ability to take countless refusals without loosing hope. Writing countless letters for the hope of attending a British university is a far more honourable way of pulling yourself out of the gutter, than pathetically advertising your services on one of the many 'mail-order bride' websites, which never fail to bring a deep sense of dispair to my heart.