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Teens from former Soviet Union countries compare freedoms

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  • Teens from former Soviet Union countries compare freedoms

    Posted on Sun, Jan. 28, 2007

    Teens from former Soviet Union countries compare freedoms

    Five 16-year-olds studying in area schools
    By Russ Keen
    American News Writer

    Five 16-year-old girls from four former Soviet Union countries engaged in
    debate last week in Aberdeen about who has more freedom - Aberdeen-area teens
    or teens from their countries.
    "At home, we can use cell phones in school," said Marina Pavlik of Russia
    and an exchange student at Aberdeen Central High School, where students cannot
    use cell phones.
    But area teens enjoy more freedom in student-teacher relationships because
    they are more casual than back home, the girls said.
    Easier clases: Classes are a breeze here, they said.
    "I get straight A's and I don't study," said Olga Ivasyna of Moldova, a
    student at Hitchcock-Tulare High School in Tulare. "I have more fun here."
    The girls said most of what they're being taught here they already learned
    in their native lands. At home, classes are more structured and rigorous, they
    said. Students rise when a teacher enters a classroom, and lessons require
    lots of homework - from three to five hours a night, they said.
    "But we do more creative work here," Pavlik said, such as team projects ina
    classroom. "It is more fun."
    Their U.S. counterparts seem to have little homework, and the studying they
    do takes place during study hours at school.
    "Kids here don't have time to study," Pavlik said."They are working,
    baby-sitting or playing basketball."
    At home, people do not take jobs until they are 18 to 20 years old, the
    girls said.
    Drinking: Teens in their countries have more freedom to drink alcohol.
    Drinking before the age of 18 is more acceptable there than here, they said,
    partly because teens cannot drive until they're 18.
    It's common for 14-year-olds to drink at social occasions, said Yevheniya
    Voytenko of Ukraine, a student at Warner High School.
    "It is not a big deal," Pavlik said. "It is just a social thing."
    In the U.S., it seems many teens who drink do so to get drunk, while that's
    not the case in nations of the former Soviet Union, they said.
    Quiet, safe places: The best thing about the Aberdeen area is the quiet and
    the relative absence of crime, said Ella Baghramyan of Armenia. Being ableto
    leave cars and homes unlocked is unbelievable, said Anna Maksimkina of
    Russia. All five students are from cities larger than Aberdeen.
    The worst thing about the area is all the fast food, Baghramyan said.
    All the girls have studied English for at least three years, and one
    has studied it for eight. Their fluency in English is one reason they
    are among about 1,000 high school students from former Soviet Union
    countries selected from 16,000 applicants to study in the United
    States this school year through the Program of Academic Excellence, or
    PAX.
    The competition was tough, the girls said.
    Vickie Moser of Leola, who coordinates PAX exchanges in the area, said she
    is looking for host families for the 2007-08 school year. She can be reached
    at (605) 439-3656.
    Maksimkina is living with the Gordon and Sharon Goetz family of Aberdeen;
    Pavlik is with the SueAnn and Gregg Yonkovich family of Aberdeen; Voytenkois
    with the Pam and Glen Armstrong family of Warner; Ivasyna is with the Deanand
    Holly Bottum family of Tulare; and Baghramyan is living with the Bob and
    Kathy Zerr family of Aberdeen.
    Ivasyna said she felt somewhat bored when she first came to the
    Tulare-Hitchcock area. But the boredom passed quickly.
    "We have learned how to create fun with the things we have," she said.
    New friends and host families will be hard to part with come summer, the
    girls said.
    "I don't want to go home at all," Maksimkina said.


    © 2007 American News and wire service sources.
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