Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,153,073 members, 7,818,203 topics. Date: Sunday, 05 May 2024 at 10:16 AM

Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. - Travel (188) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Travel / Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. (683671 Views)

The Adventures Of A Village Scholar In Germany / Getting A Green Card By Adjustment Of Status: My Yankee Experience / Naija to Yankee Thoughts And Experiences (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (3) ... (185) (186) (187) (188) (189) (190) (191) ... (220) (Reply) (Go Down)

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Originalsly: 2:35am On Sep 01, 2018
henrydadon:


Finally caught with the thread..is it possible ups hire illegal immigrants?
Papers required....any position.
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by peacengine(m): 2:05pm On Sep 01, 2018
ayosamlove:


No vex bro... Dem matter tire me too... I’m so done with them, just post your experience with them. Nothing do you.. no matter how “crazy” it is. It is sha ur experience.... if another person get any contradicting experience make e post him own too.

Bro it's not only you, akata matter tire me grin

4 Likes

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by peacengine(m): 2:10pm On Sep 01, 2018
Originalsly:


Do you realise this is FrankNetter's thread?.....he's trying to build bridges .... and here you are trying to divide...trying to sabotage...trying to overthrow him. I assume you are in the US... on the backs of the very Akatas you're attempting to put in a negative light. The major networks been doing the same...and here you are piling on........in Frank's thread. What kind of man would enjoy the fruits of another man's labour....then piss on him? You have lost my respect.


Easy bro, if you see a log in your brother's eye and stil ignore it, means u hate him. Akatas have forgotten who they are, they are lost

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Originalsly: 3:06pm On Sep 01, 2018
peacengine:



Easy bro, if you see a log in your brother's eye and stil ignore it, means u hate him. Akatas have forgotten who they are, they are lost

Hmmm.....not clear on the log in the eye part. Akatas have not forgotten who they are...... they don't know who they are....thanks to some of our ancestors... and yes...they are lost. So what do we do? ... mock them?...or try to reconnect them to their roots?

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Jamestown123: 2:35pm On Sep 02, 2018
kroger:


This might be of help to start a house cleaning business.. https://www.wikihow.com/Start-a-House-Cleaning-Business
thanks boss ur head dey there

3 Likes

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by kroger: 3:44pm On Sep 02, 2018
Jamestown123:
thanks boss ur head dey there

Have u touched down Queensland yet?
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Jamestown123: 4:22pm On Sep 02, 2018
kroger:


Have u touched down Queensland yet?
No boss still planning where to go That's y I asked about USA na, me I don't want to make mistakes with this morning
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by kroger: 11:49pm On Sep 03, 2018
Jamestown123:
No boss still planning where to go That's y I asked about USA na, me I don't want to make mistakes with this morning

It depends on where you have your host to stay with b4 you find your feet....
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by twayne01(m): 3:03am On Sep 04, 2018
marylanderr:


Hello from MD � Enjoy your time

hi
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Jamestown123: 6:56am On Sep 04, 2018
kroger:


It depends on where you have your host to stay with b4 you find your feet....
Yea that's true bro. Anyway if way no pure I think I would just continue my biz here for the main time.
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by FrankNetter(m): 4:03pm On Sep 04, 2018
Happy new month guys.

5 Likes

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Khingtee01(m): 4:06pm On Sep 04, 2018
FrankNetter:
Happy new month guys.
Happy new month to you
Come continue your thread abeg

1 Like

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by FrankNetter(m): 5:05pm On Sep 04, 2018
Khingtee01:

Happy new month to you
Come continue your thread abeg
I Dey come. School hold me small

2 Likes

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Nobody: 6:28pm On Sep 04, 2018
FrankNetter:

I Dey come. School hold me small
Good to see you grin


Patiently waiting for updates
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by kroger: 5:24pm On Sep 05, 2018
FrankNetter:

I Dey come. School hold me small

Expecting more updates bro..
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by gees101(m): 10:51am On Sep 06, 2018
FrankNetter:
Happy new month guys.
hurray ......happy newmonth better pikin
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by kroger: 2:24am On Sep 08, 2018
.

4 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by FrankNetter(m): 8:33am On Sep 09, 2018
School


I would just go right ahead and itemize the differences between my education so far here in the USA vs my education in Nigeria. I would do this under two headings: Similarities and differences.

SIMILARITIES

1) Matric Number: Where you have the matriculation number for nigerian students, you have the student id number over here for US schools which is basically the same thing.

DIFFFERENCES

1) Admission process: Whereas the admission process in Nigeria is lengthy and stressful, getting admission into school here is quite easy. Where
there are multiple exams like JAMB and post utme exams in Nigeria, Over here, you just have to take a placement test which consists of English and Mathematics, your scores would determine which 100 level courses you would be required to take for your program.

2) Student - Lecturer ratio: This is one of the things that have shocked me the most. Back then in my 100 level, during our lectures, we were more than 2,000 students to 1 lecturer in one large never-ending hall, over here, its way different. When I got into class for the first time, I was surprised at how small the class is. I was seated in the class with like 14 other persons, I almost had to ask where the rest of the students are.

3) Flexibility: The school system here is really flexible to fit your schedule. You pick the classes you want, you choose the time you want your classes and you have the option of opting for physical or online classes. I chose to take two physical classes and two online classes. I also chose to take my classes on Tuesdays and Thursdays only. In nigerian schools, you must physically attend your lectures in the morning (kindly point out any schools where it happens otherwise).


4) Attitude: This was another shocker for me. The lecturers over here actually WANT you to PASS! like I still can't wrap my head around it. Everybody is so helpful and polite, from the janitors to the lab instructors, everybody! My younger sister is in her penultimate semester studying pre-pharmacy and her CGPA is 4.0/4.0. My point is: if you want to study hard and pass, the lecturers are willing to help. Unlike in most Nigerian universities where the lecturer would tell you getting "A" in their course is a sin.

5) Open-mindedness: My philosophy class is super interesting. The instructor made it in such a way that no question is seen as a taboo, we have heated conversations on different topics, slavery, trump etc etc. one time someone asked if God normally has _sex, heaven did not fall. On the other hand, my philosophy and logic class in my 100L in Nigeria was taught by a reverend father who made sure to throw in his biblical teachings intermittently, looking back at it now, I think that was a tactic to get us to think a certain way.

I'll post more as time goes on.

**
you guys should bear with me about the lack of posts, I'm trying to adapt to the coursework and my job. I will post more frequently.

59 Likes 7 Shares

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Homguy(m): 8:39am On Sep 09, 2018
FrankNetter:
School


I would just go right ahead and itemize the differences between my education so far here in the USA vs my education in Nigeria. I would do this under two headings: Similarities and differences.

SIMILARITIES

1) Matric Number: Where you have the matriculation number for nigerian students, you have the student id number over here for US schools which is basically the same thing.

DIFFFERENCES

1) Admission process: Whereas the admission process in Nigeria is lengthy and stressful, getting admission into school here is quite easy. Where
there are multiple exams like JAMB and post utme exams in Nigeria, Over here, you just have to take a placement test which consists of English and Mathematics, your scores would determine which 100 level courses you would be required to take for your program.

2) Student - Lecturer ratio: This is one of the things that have shocked me the most. Back then in my 100 level, during our lectures, we were more than 2,000 students to 1 lecturer in one large never-ending hall, over here, its way different. When I got into class for the first time, I was surprised at how small the class is. I was seated in the class with like 14 other persons, I almost had to ask where the rest of the students are.

3) Flexibility: The school system here is really flexible to fit your schedule. You pick the classes you want, you choose the time you want your classes and you have the option of opting for physical or online classes. I chose to take two physical classes and two online classes. I also chose to take my classes on Tuesdays and Thursdays only. In nigerian schools, you must physically attend your lectures in the morning (kindly point out any schools where it happens otherwise).


4) Attitude: This was another shocker for me. The lecturers over here actually WANT you to PASS! like I still can't wrap my head around it. Everybody is so helpful and polite, from the janitors to the lab instructors, everybody! My younger sister is in her penultimate semester studying pre-pharmacy and her CGPA is 4.0/4.0. My point is: if you want to study hard and pass, the lecturers are willing to help. Unlike in most Nigerian universities where the lecturer would tell you getting "A" in their course is a sin.


I'll post more as time goes on.

**
you guys should bear with me about the lack of posts, I'm trying to adapt to the coursework and my job. I will post more frequently.
nice reading this!
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Originalsly: 1:00pm On Sep 09, 2018
FrankNetter:
School

**
you guys should bear with me about the lack of posts, I'm trying to adapt to the coursework and my job. I will post more frequently.

Ha!.....I'm surprised you even have energy to post anything. ... guess you find a way to get get around UPS energy draining work! Insightful update.... can see no time to chill. We see or hear about so many being successful....but the road to that success we never hear about in the details you be outlining.
"The height of great men reached and kept...
...was not attained by sudden flight
... but they as their companions slept
....were toiling upwards through the night.


Keep on toiling bro.....I going back to sleep!

12 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by FrankNetter(m): 2:56pm On Sep 09, 2018
I recently went to one Burger King (at Matteson) to get some food and I ran into an old time manager who I worked with a few times. When I used to work at Burger King (at Chicago heights), she wasn’t traditionally working there too but she got transferred there a few times when we were short on managers. So they would call her to work a particular shift for that day.

When I walked into the store she was excited to see me, I was shocked and surprised. This lady is older than I am, so I was wondering what the ruckus was about. She then asked me if I’ve got some time to spare that she needs to talk to me. I only came to get a chocolate milkshake but I told her I got a few minutes. Long story short, she told me she was being transferred to “my store” (at Chicago heights) to work permanently as the general manager and that she would like me to come work for her as a shift manager grin.

I was excited at first but I didn’t give her an answer. I told her we would speak on the phone. She gave me her number.

After a few days, I called her and after the regular formalities, I asked her what the pay rate would be, she said $11.50/hour when I start, then $12/hour after 30 days. I tried to bargain with her to increase it, citing my reliability and work ethic. She refused to succumb. I then told her to give a few more days to think about it. But I never called her back.

I don’t think it’s a good deal cos when I used to work there,the managers at suffer a lot. If someone doesn’t show up to work, you have to help out fill in the space, if food or money gets missing, na you dem go hold, if a customer wants to be rude, na you dem go insult.

The major thing that made me reject the offer was the pay. I could waltz into any nursing home or hospital to work as a CNA (I’m still a Certified nursing assistant, remember?) and start getting paid $13/hour for much less work but to pay someone $11.50/hour for the workload at Burger King is unfair. Maybe that’s the reason they are short on managers

34 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by FrankNetter(m): 2:58pm On Sep 09, 2018
Originalsly:


Ha!.....I'm surprised you even have energy to post anything. ... guess you find a way to get get around UPS energy draining work! Insightful update.... can see no time to chill. We see or hear about so many being successful....but the road to that success we never hear about in the details you be outlining.
"The height of great men reached and kept...
...was not attained by sudden flight
... but they as their companions slept
....were toiling upwards through the night.


Keep on toiling bro.....I going back to sleep!

Thanks man, how body?

5 Likes

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by FrankNetter(m): 3:05pm On Sep 09, 2018
For yankee here, there are few open air markets. You know in naija if you want to buy household items, building materials like wood, nails, toilets, paint you drive down to the market & sadly most times, all the items you need would not be in the same market. So you have to juggle different markets. Well, for yankee here, they have specific stores for stuff like that. The two most popular are called “home-depot” and “menards”.

I recently went to one of them to get heavy-duty gloves for my work, so I took a few photos.

12 Likes

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by FrankNetter(m): 3:10pm On Sep 09, 2018
Everything you need, from paints to toilets are located here.

6 Likes

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by FrankNetter(m): 3:17pm On Sep 09, 2018
So the courses I’m taking are Psychology, Philosophy, English and Biology. The biology is divided into class and lab.

Last week, when we went to the lab for some experiments. We were handed thermometers to do some random readings. Having been schooled all my life in naija, I’m used to seeing mercury thermometers. But these thermometers we were given had kerosene in it.

I quietly walked to the instructor and she confirmed it was indeed kerosene, then I asked why they were using kerosene instead of mercury. She told me recent scientific studies have shown that mercury has an adverse effect on neurological (brain) functions in kids and teenagers, so they switched to using kerosene cos it pretty much has the same properties as mercury and has no adverse effects.

Guess which country still uses mercury thermometers? When will Nigeria catch up with the rest of the world?

34 Likes 6 Shares

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Vyntra(m): 4:04pm On Sep 09, 2018
Hmm,I wish the OP best of luck in his educational endeavours.I will like to add that there are good universities in Nigeria too that is atleast close to international standards but they are mostly private universities,let's be honest good education is expensive,that's when the government comes in with funds to improve the infrastructure and the sector as all in a way we can refer to as subsidising but it's not their concern,all they care about is their pocket greediness for power,the educational sector in Nigeria,the public ones to be precise will not improve and will be in a pool of stagnacy as long as the old and corrupted leaders are being recycled.

2 Likes

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Originalsly: 4:12pm On Sep 09, 2018
FrankNetter:


Thanks man, how body?

I good...pacing myself...dreadful winter may try to outdo summer in terms of harshness!

4 Likes

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by 1Rebel: 4:12pm On Sep 09, 2018
Vyntra:
Hmm,I wish the OP best of luck in his educational endeavours.I will like to add that there are good universities in Nigeria too that is atleast close to international standards but they are mostly private universities,let's be honest good education is expensive,that's when the government comes in with funds to improve the infrastructure and the sector as all in a way we can refer to as subsidising but it's not their concern,all they care about is their pocket greediness for power,the educational sector in Nigeria,the public ones to be precise will not improve and will be in a pool of stagnacy as long as the old and corrupted leaders are being recycled.


Bro, I’m sure Op is making his comparison between public universities in Nigeria and America, nowhere in his posts did he state that he’s comparing private to private, which even if he did, there would be no comparison anyway cos private schools in USA would beat Nigerian private schools hands down.

And yeah, Nigeria would keep moving backwards as far as we keep voting these Neanderthal goats to be our leaders.

For these upcoming elections, it’s either between Moghalu or Sowore (or someone new entirely)

Fvck Atiku, fvck Buhari, fvck kwankwaso

16 Likes

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Dremca(m): 5:21pm On Sep 09, 2018
I could remember this is manager that called you to apologise after she f-up.
FrankNetter:
I recently went to one Burger King (at Matteson) to get some food and I ran into an old time manager who I worked with a few times. When I used to work at Burger King (at Chicago heights), she wasn’t traditionally working there too but she got transferred there a few times when we were short on managers. So they would call her to work a particular shift for that day.

When I walked into the store she was excited to see me, I was shocked and surprised. This lady is older than I am, so I was wondering what the ruckus was about. She then asked me if I’ve got some time to spare that she needs to talk to me. I only came to get a chocolate milkshake but I told her I got a few minutes. Long story short, she told me she was being transferred to “my store” (at Chicago heights) to work permanently as the general manager and that she would like me to come work for her as a shift manager grin.

I was excited at first but I didn’t give her an answer. I told her we would speak on the phone. She gave me her number.

After a few days, I called her and after the regular formalities, I asked her what the pay rate would be, she said $11.50/hour when I start, then $12/hour after 30 days. I tried to bargain with her to increase it, citing my reliability and work ethic. She refused to succumb. I then told her to give a few more days to think about it. But I never called her back.

I don’t think it’s a good deal cos when I used to work there,the managers at suffer a lot. If someone doesn’t show up to work, you have to help out fill in the space, if food or money gets missing, na you dem go hold, if a customer wants to be rude, na you dem go insult.

The major thing that made me reject the offer was the pay. I could waltz into any nursing home or hospital to work as a CNA (I’m still a Certified nursing assistant, remember?) and start getting paid $13/hour for much less work but to pay someone $11.50/hour for the workload at Burger King is unfair. Maybe that’s the reason they are short on managers

1 Like

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by subcbouy: 5:46pm On Sep 09, 2018
Vyntra:
Hmm,I wish the OP best of luck in his educational endeavours.I will like to add that there are good universities in Nigeria too that is atleast close to international standards but they are mostly private universities,let's be honest good education is expensive,that's when the government comes in with funds to improve the infrastructure and the sector as all in a way we can refer to as subsidising but it's not their concern,all they care about is their pocket greediness for power,the educational sector in Nigeria,the public ones to be precise will not improve and will be in a pool of stagnacy as long as the old and corrupted leaders are being recycled.
The problem with most Nigerians is, university should be free. Most Nigerian universities are too lazy to source for funds outside the shore. When government is not supplying funds, schools should help themselves. Good quality in teaching style and research advancement are two pseudo syndromes facing our schools, apart government failure to funding these institutions, because without these two, funds may become difficult in getting from foreign bodies. Good point from you.

2 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Electroweb(m): 6:05pm On Sep 09, 2018
FrankNetter:
So the courses I’m taking are Psychology, Philosophy, English and Biology. The biology is divided into class and lab.

Last week, when we went to the lab for some experiments. We were handed thermometers to do some random readings. Having been schooled all my life in naija, I’m used to seeing mercury thermometers. But these thermometers we were given had kerosene in it.

I quietly walked to the instructor and she confirmed it was indeed kerosene, then I asked why they were using kerosene instead of mercury. She told me recent scientific studies have shown that mercury has an adverse effect on neurological (brain) functions in kids and teenagers, so they switched to using kerosene cos it pretty much has the same properties as mercury and has no adverse effects.

Guess which country still uses mercury thermometers? When will Nigeria catch up with the rest of the world?


Na wa! Nigeria my beloved country! Na who do us this thing? Na who we offend as a country? If we offend somebody, e never reach make the person forgive us? It is well o!

2 Likes 2 Shares

(1) (2) (3) ... (185) (186) (187) (188) (189) (190) (191) ... (220) (Reply)

Giving Birth In Canada / Canadian Student Visa Thread Part 19 / General German Student Visa Enquiries Part 4

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 73
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.