One thing I find a little odd about these reports is when she speaks in English there are German texts on the display and when she speaks in German there are German text on the screen. I could stop and translate each but it takes a lot of time. But overall I like her reports.
let me make this clear for any foreign students: germans are very open to other cultures and languages. But if your communication and language skills aren't at a certain level, it will be very, very difficult to get in contact with the them. in the end, they are germans, they do wanna talk and are willing to get to know you, but well, on a certain efficiency level. it's worth it. they are very nice if you get to know them.
@@lightblue254 and why don't answer in english then?! lol. Darüber hinaus dürfte dir dann auch aufgefallen sein, dass ich über Sprach-Skills im Allgemeinen spreche und nicht bloß über eine einzelne Sprache bzw. nur über Deutsch.
@@medtosby4928 Who the hell would tell foreigners to speak German besides a German, deswegen auf Deutsch =| Sprach-skills kannst du auch in Englisch haben.
@@Robertocarlos-ej5ne Stress is possible evereyway in university life. From the money side, except for accomodations and living cost university is free unlikely to USA or UK. I could not understand the exact problem here. I've heard that some universitys in Germany needs hard-studying but my purpose is not that much idealistic :)
@@Robertocarlos-ej5ne My plan is not there to work. First things first I've to build my educational background then I will look for the conditions and options to make the right move. As I am Turkish, I can easily understand your concerns about racism... İt is inevitable not but in just Germany also in other countries. By the way What did you studied and could you speak German while you were studying?
Niemand spricht nirgends über Voraussetzungen für musikbezogene Studiengänge. Gibt es dafür eine Altersgrenze? Gibt es eine Website, auf der die Regeln für Ausländer erklärt werden?
Yes, I know. You should be careful with NC (Numerus Clausus). It's mentioned in the video. You need very good marks to get in. I mean VERY good. Usually 97% average marks. Marks in germany are different, they go from 6 (worse) to 1 (best). Specially in medicine and psychology you really need to have good marks to get in. You can look up univeristies in the top universities ranking, a lot of them should pop up. Besides, you need a diploma that's equal to the german abitur. That means you either have to have a high school diploma from the EU or you have to do the IB diploma. If you don't have any of those, you can always visit a Studienkolleg the first year of your studies to get a Abitur. Also, you need to have german C1 level certified. You can do courses in English, but they are more difficult to get into, because so many people from abroad want to go.
@@stressedsagittarious8974 Thanks for reply, I am from Slovenia so there are no problems when it comes to Abitur and I am going to do a DSD diploma, which confirms a person is good enough in german to study or work there. But what I was asking was if every psychology course in german universities has entrance exams, which test your knowledge of basics and so on. If you could once again give me some feedback that would be great. Vielen Dank!
@@pondamovies8323 no, we usually don’t have this „entrance exams“ like in other countries because the universities usually just use the NC from Abi. However you should still check the requirements for foreigners in the exact university you want to go because they have different rules and not all of them use your NC as the main selection criterion :) but the number of places for foreigners is limited and it was 5% at my university. Btw I had somebody from Slovenia in my bachelor psychology ;) Good luck to you.. Psychology is fascinating!!!
@@MrMegaPerez Vielen Dank für Ihre Erkenntnisse und hat dieser Slowene eine Sprachdiplom wie DSD gemacht? Ich werde wahrscheinlich für einen Master in ein deutschsprachiges Land gehen, wenn mein Deutsch besser ist.
@@pondamovies8323 gerne :) Ich weiß leider nicht ob die Dame aus Slowenien ein Sprachdiplom hatte oder nicht. Ich beende meinen Master grade auf einer anderen Uni und kann sie nicht mehr fragen :/ Für den Master gibt es an manchen Unis Tests. Ich habe z.B zwei gemacht, einen in Bamberg und einen in Heidelberg, hier wird speziell Psychologiewissen aus dem Bachelor abgefragt. Es ist also manchmal verschieden und man muss immer genau bei der Uni schauen wo man hingehen möchte. Möchtest du danach Psychotherapeut werden? Dann brauchst du unbedingt einen „klinischen Master“. Außerdem solltest du nicht zu lange warten, weil das Psychologiestudium in den nächsten Jahren reformiert wird.
You forgot to mention that roughly one-third of all Bachelor freshmen do not graduate from German universities at all. Tuition-free courses come with a tremendous cost: outdated equipment, highly selective grading systems and lack of support from staff members because of not manageable amounts of students in certain fields. Furthermore, outdated exam schemes, e. g. law schools with almost no exams over a period of 5 years let students fail at the end because the final exam covers almost everything they have studied in 10 semesters.
Außerdem gibt es ja in vielen Bundesländern und Kommunen auch einige Angebote für Auszubildende. In Thüringen beispielsweise gibt es seit circa 2018 auch ein Azubi-Ticket ähnlich der Vergünstigungen für Studierende.
That depends entirely on the particular university. Usually there's no admission criteria other than a high school degree as they're "zulassungsfrei". But that means the whole first or first two semesters will be your entrance exam as there's lots of hard exams. At my university (I'm studying CS too) some of these exams had failure rates of 40-50% . Edit: obviously you need to be able to speak German too.
If you want to do a bachelor, speak German like on B2, for master there're many who are in English but you need to learn some German nonetheless. In general you can look up the requirements for international students on the individual uni's website. Informatics usually don't have a numerus clausus, so there it's more important if you meet the general requirements for studying in Germany, so look up how Indian (school) degrees are accepted in Germany. If you're already on a uni and are looking for a master, look up the partner unis. Most unis have international relations to others and maintain a partnership, also to exchange students. And of course your financial situation will be important. Of course through the fees you don't need to worry about public transportation, but rent, food, clothing, etc. are important.
@@emilycminty Yes I know what you mean by diverse, if you don’t want to see the site of native Germans then maybe go watch a video about universities in Canada or somewhere like that where you will find plenty of diversity.
study in Germany? when all we have to face is extreme uncertainty, risk our careers due to corrupt, slow and inefficient german embassies, and be depressed at the end?