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留學(xué)生的第一個(gè)學(xué)期,
通常不是用來(lái)“拿榮譽(yù)”的:
要適應(yīng)語(yǔ)言和學(xué)習(xí)節(jié)奏、鍛煉獨(dú)立生活能力,好多人只是在努力不掉隊(duì)。
但入學(xué)半年不到,
我們2025屆高中畢業(yè)生申昊正(Harry Shen)
卻收到了來(lái)自大學(xué)的雙重肯定——
GPA 3.829高分和入選Provost’s Honor Roll & Dean’s List(學(xué)校最高學(xué)術(shù)榮譽(yù))。
對(duì)于剛剛?cè)雽W(xué)半年的大一新生來(lái)說(shuō),這樣的成績(jī),來(lái)之不易。
本期 Talk · Passion,Harry把他在大學(xué)的經(jīng)驗(yàn)講給我們聽(tīng):
嘉賓:申昊正
啟明星學(xué)校2025屆高中畢業(yè)生
美國(guó)邁阿密大學(xué)建筑學(xué)專業(yè)大一學(xué)生
大學(xué)本科5年全額獎(jiǎng)學(xué)金獲得者
80%時(shí)間都在學(xué)習(xí)
我早上 9 點(diǎn)上課,
基本都是專業(yè)相關(guān)的課;
下午是一些通識(shí)課程,
到下午4 點(diǎn)左右結(jié)束。
真正開(kāi)始做項(xiàng)目(作業(yè)),
是下午 4 點(diǎn)以后。
我會(huì)一直做到6、7點(diǎn),然后小睡一會(huì)兒。
睡到8、9點(diǎn)起來(lái),再繼續(xù)做項(xiàng)目,
一直做到晚上 12 點(diǎn)左右,然后睡覺(jué)。
幾乎每天都是這樣一個(gè)流程。
周末會(huì)稍微松一點(diǎn),但也不是完全躺平。我會(huì)去超市采購(gòu),回宿舍自己做飯,比如煎牛排、做西紅柿雞蛋面,或者煮個(gè)小火鍋。
周末也會(huì)去健身,我們學(xué)校的健身房應(yīng)該算是全美大學(xué)里很豪的那一檔。
我還買了車,也挺喜歡開(kāi)車,有時(shí)候會(huì)和朋友自駕游,去邁阿密周邊的沼澤地、自然景觀看看。
我也參加了學(xué)校的中國(guó)學(xué)生會(huì),幫他們做一些宣發(fā)和活動(dòng)準(zhǔn)備。
算下來(lái),一周大概80%的時(shí)間都在學(xué)習(xí),20%是自己的時(shí)間。
太難了,教授不會(huì)把所有細(xì)節(jié)都教給你,
他們更多給你一個(gè)方向、一個(gè)提示,
剩下的全部要你自己去摸索。
比如我們會(huì)用到很多軟件:
PS、InDesign、各種建模軟件、CAD……
教授可能只用 20 分鐘講一些非常基礎(chǔ)的東西,
教你怎么建文件,
然后就結(jié)束了。
剩下的,不管是上網(wǎng)自學(xué)、摸索,
還是不斷踩坑,
全都要靠你自己。
所以這個(gè)專業(yè)真的很磨人,
要求你在很短的時(shí)間內(nèi),
把該學(xué)的東西全都學(xué)會(huì)。
我最享受的部分是——
看著自己的項(xiàng)目從 0 到完成的全過(guò)程。
當(dāng)你真的在一個(gè)項(xiàng)目里投入二三十個(gè)小時(shí),
最后把它完整做出來(lái),
而且自己是滿意的,
那種成就感真的很強(qiáng)!
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Harry在大學(xué)做的項(xiàng)目(局部)
這半年我一共做了 9 個(gè)項(xiàng)目。
有的項(xiàng)目從立項(xiàng)到截止,
可能只有一周半時(shí)間。
當(dāng)時(shí)幾乎每天到凌晨3、4點(diǎn),
工作室里都還有人在工作。
沒(méi)有一個(gè)項(xiàng)目是我糊弄出來(lái)的,
都是一筆一劃,
或者用鼠標(biāo)一點(diǎn)一點(diǎn)做出來(lái)的。
周圍同學(xué)都挺努力!
我有時(shí)候會(huì)覺(jué)得:我學(xué)得還挺快的。
結(jié)果抬頭一看,
別人也學(xué)會(huì)了,而且做得也很好。
慢慢我就意識(shí)到,
不是自己不夠努力,
而是所有人都在拼命把項(xiàng)目做好。
重要的能力:
時(shí)間管理+自我調(diào)節(jié)
時(shí)間管理很重要,
因?yàn)轫?xiàng)目真的催得緊,
有時(shí)候半天時(shí)間,
就要求你完成一個(gè)體量很大的東西,
但同時(shí)你還有其他課程在并行。
另外,自我調(diào)節(jié)也很重要。
你不可能 24 小時(shí)一直緊繃著。
實(shí)在頂不住的時(shí)候,
我就去校園里走一走。
我們學(xué)校很漂亮,有水、有小動(dòng)物,
逛一圈回去繼續(xù)做。
你一定要找到讓自己不那么緊繃的方法,
不然真的會(huì)出問(wèn)題。
熱愛(ài)自己的專業(yè)非常重要
學(xué)建筑真的很累。
有時(shí)候項(xiàng)目做到凌晨3、4點(diǎn),
只睡3個(gè)小時(shí),
早上8點(diǎn)鬧鐘一響,
真的非常不想起床。
但正因?yàn)槭钦娴南矚g,
我才會(huì)愿意逼著自己把項(xiàng)目做完、做好。
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用好學(xué)校資源
第一,是教授和助教。
他們真的有可能在未來(lái)給你帶來(lái)實(shí)習(xí)獲者工作機(jī)會(huì),不要怕去問(wèn),不要覺(jué)得麻煩。
第二,學(xué)校的輔導(dǎo)員。
他們都是有經(jīng)驗(yàn)的人,你可以在網(wǎng)上和他們預(yù)約時(shí)間,很快就能聊上。
選課、規(guī)劃未來(lái)方向,都可以和他們聊。
第三,利用是各個(gè)office。
不管是電腦壞了、軟件出問(wèn)題,還是生活上的事,都可以直接 walk in。
還有 career fair(工作招聘會(huì))。
哪怕你是一年級(jí)的,什么都不準(zhǔn)備,
也能去聽(tīng)、去看,
這樣你能提前知道各個(gè)行業(yè)都在發(fā)生什么。
中國(guó)學(xué)生要守住自己
建筑是一個(gè)非常依賴多文化素養(yǎng)的專業(yè),
你不可能一直只按照一種風(fēng)格來(lái)設(shè)計(jì)。
比如我們有一個(gè)項(xiàng)目是設(shè)計(jì) courtyard house(庭院住宅)。
有同學(xué)做西班牙式的,
有做南美風(fēng)格的,
我做的是四合院。
教授當(dāng)時(shí)特別開(kāi)心,
因?yàn)樵谝粋€(gè)組里,他能看到這么多不同文化的表達(dá)。
我覺(jué)得還要注意一點(diǎn),
就是梁思成先生說(shuō)的 “新而中”:
要接受新的事物,
去理解、擁抱不同的文化,
但同時(shí)不能忘記自己的根。
尤其是對(duì)留學(xué)生來(lái)說(shuō),
在一個(gè)全新的社會(huì)環(huán)境里,
保持開(kāi)放,但不迷失自己,
非常重要。
申請(qǐng)大學(xué)之前,最好能訪校
大學(xué)排名高不是標(biāo)準(zhǔn),適合自己才是。
我自己就訪過(guò)另外一個(gè)校園。
那里給我的感覺(jué)是非常經(jīng)典的美式校園,
紅磚建筑風(fēng)格很統(tǒng)一,
但天氣冷、學(xué)習(xí)壓力大,
學(xué)生整體狀態(tài)比較沉。
后來(lái)我來(lái)到邁阿密大學(xué),
完全是另一種感覺(jué):
陽(yáng)光、棕櫚樹(shù),
學(xué)生整體狀態(tài)很活躍,
健身房、校園空間里的人,
都在享受生活。
如果我選學(xué)校只是看排名、看網(wǎng)上的評(píng)論,
而不親自去學(xué)校,
我會(huì)覺(jué)得對(duì)不起自己未來(lái)的人生。
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啟明星執(zhí)行總校長(zhǎng)Daniel Williams獲“福布斯中國(guó)卓越校長(zhǎng)獎(jiǎng)”
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律師篇 | 做律師,門檻有多高?
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For many international students,
the first semester of college is rarely about “winning honors.”
Most are focused on adapting to a new language and academic pace,
learning how to live independently,
and simply trying to keep up.
Yet during the recent winter break,
Our Class of 2025 graduateHarry Shen
received dual recognition from his university:
GPA 3.829 and Provost’s Honor Roll & Dean’s List (the university’s highest academic honors).
For a first-year student who has been in college for only half a year,
this achievement did not come easily.
In this issue of Talk · Passion,
Harry shares the highs and lows of his first semester of university life.
Guest Speaker: Harry Shen
Daystar Academy, Class of 2025
First-year Architecture major, University of Miami (USA)
Recipient of a full five-year undergraduate scholarship
80% of my time goes to studying.
My days are actually very structured.
I start classes at 9:00 a.m., mostly major-related courses.
In the afternoon, I have general education classes, which usually end around 4:00 p.m.
Real project work begins after 4:00.
I usually work until 6:00 or 7:00 p.m., then take a short nap.
Around 8:00 or 9:00, I wake up and continue working, often until midnight before going to sleep.
Almost every day follows this routine.
Weekends are a bit more relaxed, but not completely free.
I go grocery shopping and cook for myself in the dorm — steak, tomato-and-egg noodles, or sometimes a small hot pot.
I also go to the gym; our campus gym is among the best in the U.S.
I bought a car and really enjoy driving.
Sometimes I go on road trips with friends,
exploring the wetlands and nearby natural landscapes around Miami.
Overall, about 80 percent of my time each week goes to studying, and 20 percent is personal time.
I’m also involved in the Chinese Students Association, helping with promotion and event organization.
The hardest part is professors don’t teach you every detail.
The hardest part is that professors don’t teach you every detail.
They give you direction and hints, and the rest you have to figure out on your own.
For example, we use many software tools—
Photoshop, InDesign, 3D modeling software, CAD, and more.
A professor might spend only 20 minutes explaining the basics,such as how to set up files, and then move on.
Everything else—self-study, trial and error, making mistakes and trying again—
it’s entirely up to you.
This major is really demanding.
It requires you to master a large amount of knowledge in a very short time.
The part I enjoyed
themost was —
Watching a project go from zero to completion.
When you truly put twenty or thirty hours into a project,
see it through to the very end,
and are genuinely satisfied with the result,
that sense of achievement is incredibly powerful.
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Harry’s University Projects (Selected Works)
Over the past six months, I’ve completed nine projects.
For some of them, from initial proposal to final deadline,
we had only about a week and a half.
During those times, almost every night until 3 or 4 a.m.,
there were still people working in the studio.
Not a single project was done half-heartedly.
Every one was built stroke by stroke,
or click by click with a mouse.
Everyone works extremely hard.
Sometimes I feel like I’m learning farily quickly.
But when I look up, others have also mastered the material—and produced excellent work.
Over time, I realized that it’s not that I’m not working hard enough;
it’s that everyone is pushing themselves to do their best on each project.
The most important skill in college is time management, without question,
Because Projects deadlines are extremely tight.
Sometimes you’re given only half a day to complete something with a very large workload,
while other courses are running in parallel.
On top of managing time,
you also have to manage yourself.
You can’t stay tense 24 hours a day.
When I feel overwhelmed,
I take a walk around campus.
Our campus is beautiful; there’s water, wildlife, open space.
After a walk, I go back and continue working.
You must find ways to release pressure,
or you will burn out.
To study something you truly love is extremely important.
Architecture is exhausting.
Sometimes you’re working on projects until 3:00 or 4:00 a.m.,
sleeping only three hours.
When the 8:00 a.m. alarm goes off,
you truly don’t want to get up.
But because I genuinely love this field,
I’m willing to push myself to finish projects—and finish them well.
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You must be proactive about using university resources.
First, professors and teaching assistants.
They can lead to future internships or job opportunities.
Don’t be afraid to ask questions or worry about bothering them.
Second, counselors.
They are experienced professionals.
You can book appointments online and talk with them easily
about course selection and future plans.
Third, make use of different campus offices.
Whether it’s a computer issue, software problems, or daily life concerns,
you can simply walk in and get help.
Also, attend career fairs.
Even as a first-year student,
you can go without preparation and just observe and listen. It helps you understand what’s happening across industries.
These resources exist for students — use them.
Before applying,
take the time to truly understand each university — and visit if possible.
High rankings is not everything;
fit matters most.
I visited another school.
It felt like a classic American campus —
beautiful red-brick buildings, very traditional.
But the weather was cold, the academic pressure was high,
and the overall student mood felt heavy.
When I visited the University of Miami, it was completely different:
sunshine, palm trees,
a lively student atmosphere,
people enjoying life in the gym and around campus.
If I had chosen a school based only on rankings or online reviews,
without visiting in person,
I would feel that I had let down my future life.
Selectives
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Dr. Williams, Daystar Executive Head of Schools, Receives the Forbes China Outstanding School Principal Award
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Talk·Career | How Hard Is It To Become A Lawyer?
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