Firstly, the attentiveness and social settings of the university are accommodating, patient and welcoming. I was primarily based on the City Centre Campus in Newcastle in the Business and Law building although on occasion I would train at Coach Lane grounds for football.
Regarding the academics, I had the unfortunate timing of the Covid 19 pandemic that forced the 2nd semester of my first year at the university to resort to an online structure. This limited one on one mentorship and challenged self motivations greatly. My efforts in participation were met with silence from the course mates that could hide behind muted screens or bad wifi service.
My Business with International Management course was chosen to align with a future career path in working globally but that led to a more general grasp using theoretical frameworks rather than real world application of accounting, marketing and more. However, the programme leaders, module and personal tutors that I had the pleasure of meeting between 2019 to 2023 were incredibly helpful from assignments to comprehension.
Notable staff include Ziad Elsahn and Arrian Cornwell. There was one of my module tutors who I cannot remember his name who absolutely humbled me when I thought I had created a fantastic presentation describing the company Amazon as a monopoly by creating an interactive game board similar to the actual game Monopoly but utilizing Amazon’s growth strategies and a SWOT analysis. However, I failed to impress the tutor as he had never heard of the game at all before and marked me as inadequate at presenting the company as a monopoly.
This made me realize how diverse Northumbria University was; not just in its international student population but also the various backgrounds and perspectives it can host. Newcastle upon Tyne, the city itself was rich with history and large enough to be attractive to international students yet small enough to have mutuals easily. You could tuck away into the library, sightsee on the weekends to experience the NorthEast’s raw, natural beauty, and also party hard with Newcastle’s renowned nightlife.
Why is my overall rating a 4 out of 5? I genuinely believe there is always room for improvement. I became a programme rep for a couple years, mostly because of a lack of competition for the role and responsibility. The fact that my course mates felt no desire nor excitement to be an integral part of the classes or uni that we went to felt like there could be more attractive parts to their degrees. It could have felt less theoretical. Less essay writing, more real-world prompts. However, everything else was so lovely, from the diverse community at Northumbria, to the POLY sports culture, to the windy cold city that felt warm to my heart from the start.