The University of Sheffield is the first university I came into contact with, which has carried my whole undergraduate career. I love this university, plain and stable, but mixed with some boring. It was a big, less prosperous city, where heavy industry was gradually eliminated because of restrictions on the steel industry. A large part of the city’s vitality seems to come from foreign students. I studied at the University of Sheffield’s School of Management, a department on a hill where the daily trek was a bit exhausting. The teacher’s enthusiasm enables students to stimulate their own learning motivation, which is a very good guide. The course that impressed me the most was the one involving psychology and management in my junior year, which was the first time I came into contact with the interaction between subjects. These disciplines seem to have their roots in philosophy, including different discourses, and play a considerable role in learning the ability to think critically. This way of thinking is based on the improvement of their own ability to measure interests. In this stage of exercise is more logical, and critical thinking ability. There is a reason why the University of Sheffield arranges courses to study management philosophy, including social constructivism in psychology and so on. All of this has benefited me tremendously. This is a university worthy of being recommended.