In each issue of the newsletter, we aim to share one inspiring story of IAESTE student aborad.
In February, it is a story of Swiss in Nigeria by Elias Xaver Hubert.
Find out below what all Elias experienced during his IAESTE internship!
Work.
I worked at CCT (Complete Computers and Technologies), a company that focuses on teaching IT skills for around two months during which I taught Python and LaTeX to students. I was warmly welcomed on my first day at work by my coworkers. My accommodation at the University of Benin was a bit far (~45 minutes drive) from my
Workplace. The company organised a cab to take me to and from work every day.
Sometimes we also used public transport (small and cramped buses which you stop randomly on the street) for the commute, which was definitely an amazing experience and made me appreciate the luxury of having a driver. The teaching experience was good and the students were quite eager to learn. Time definitely had a different meaning than in Switzerland, and I was mostly on my own in creating the teaching content for my classes. Those were things one gets used to. The work environment was very understanding and laid-back. At the end of my stay, the company organised a little farewell party for me, where everyone from cleaning ladies to the front office participated, which was quite touching. I will keep them all in good memory.
Experience.
I stayed in the postgraduate hostel on the Campus of the University of Benin. The hostel was great, there were several rooms (up to 2 people each) dedicated for IAESTE students in addition to a washroom, kitchen, showers and toilet. Of course, sometimes there are water and electricity problems but this is what makes you appreciate the luxury you have. The people around the hostel were always willing to help you. Overall, the standard of the accommodation is great and even more so are the people you share it with. Before I came, I was worried about being the only foreign student during the time of my stay, but I connected well with the other students and made some good friends. We played table tennis and chess, went out to the market and film house (where we watched both Hollywood and the unique Nigerian Nollywood) and ate together. I really had a good time there and will miss the place with its people.
Among the highlights of my time in Nigeria were the road trips (Abraka – McCarthy Beach, Akure – Idanre hills, Okomu National Park) as well as the stays in Abuja and Lagos after I finished my internship – all of which I visited together with the IAESTE Coordinator. The tapping of fresh palm wine at the Oil-Palm Research Institute was also a very cool experience (as was the consequent consumption). Not every place I would have wanted to visit was possible and I was strongly discouraged to travel on my own (both for security reasons) but the Local Committee really did an outstanding job in accommodating my
desire to explore different parts of the country, and I am very grateful to them.
Discover.
For me, the stay in Nigeria was all about the unique experiences and life lessons, which you just can’t have at home (at least as a spoiled student in Switzerland) and the new discoveries these experiences offer. These are things like the arrival at the airport, where for the first time I had to “tip” an officer who apparently couldn’t find my health QR code in the database, the crazy traffic, the infrastructure, maintenance and trash problems, the hospitality, the laid-back attitude to food, sleep, Covid-19 and life in general and of course the fascinating discussions and insights into the political and cultural situation in Nigeria. During many (but not all) of these experiences, I had a really good time and I feel like I grew as a person during my stay in Nigeria.