Thursday, October 20, 2011

The Dream For UK Education

Almost two months have lapsed since I first arrived in this beautiful, bustling city of London. And I couldn't be more grateful at the fact that this whole 'back to school' so far turns out to be waaay more interesting and fun than I expected it to be (and mind you I had a very high expectation that it's going to be good; read my previous post). Everything that I hoped for in this 'long break' are there, and then there's more.

Of course, I am not really on a year-long 'holiday'. I'm studying. There are lectures to attend, tonnes of reading lists to go through, study projects to complete and the inevitable, dreaded examinations to undertake. But being a post-grad, or more accurately, a working adult going back to 'studentry' (since there are also many people who go to postgraduate studies soon after completing their basic degrees), things are seen and felt at quite a different angle. 

Of most significant is how we could really appreciate the sudden ample time that we have. I can't stress this enough. It is one of the most basic needs we know is limited there in the working planet, the thing we occasionally desperately cry for, and as such, it just can't be taken for granted. It's harder for freshers to comprehend this in its ultimate sense. When I was an undergrad, I thought I knew how time-draining working will be like after what the adults at the time aggressively warned me about prior to me entering it; I had no idea. I guess things like this need to be experienced in order for us to really 'get it'.

But other than that, I also just love my course. I can feel the niche Intellectual Property has, the powerful position it's placed in the modern economy. I am, and will always continue to see myself, as a man of science, an advocate of invention, so the idea that Intellectual Property sorts to bridge the gap between R&D and C&E in the R -> D -> C -> E chain (to the uninitiated, it's Research to Development to Commercialization to Entrepreneurship), excites me. It's great that I can feel a bond, an attachment to the course; it makes learning it a passion, rather than strictly 'studying'.

And finally, I'm blessed to be given the opportunity to study here in the UK, and making London my temporary home. It's a great place to base for education, and at the same time enjoy the little little things life has to offer. It's been a dream, a dream that comes true.

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