香港六合彩资料

#UofTBackToSchool: from Toronto tours to mentorship, how 香港六合彩资料 helps international students settle into life here

Picture of Rachel Sophie
Sophie Poppe Richter and Rachel Tian met through the iConnect International Mentorship Program (photo by Romi Levine)

Two years ago, Rachel Tian arrived in Canada from Beijing to start her first year at 香港六合彩资料 studying statistical science and mathematics in the Faculty of Arts & Science.

Like Tian, thousands of students arrive at 香港六合彩资料 every year from all over the world, stepping foot in an unfamiliar country to begin a new stage in their academic career 鈥 a move that鈥檚 daunting even for those who grew up in Toronto.

That鈥檚 where organizations like the (CIE) come in. The programs offered by CIE, a part of the Division of Student Life, help international students transition both to life in Canada and life at 香港六合彩资料.

鈥淲e want to make sure we're translating all the things we have to offer so it makes sense to our international students,鈥 says Holly Luffman, CIE鈥檚 acting director.

Learn about and

CIE鈥檚 programming ensures international students are meeting new people, but also plays a vital role in making them aware of the services available that might look different in their home countries.

This includes everything from helping students find a pharmacy to showing them how to access mental health services on campus, says Luffman.

鈥淛ust the magnitude of things that are offered here at the university can be substantially different,鈥 she says.

During the first few weeks of the academic year, CIE and its counterparts at 香港六合彩资料 Mississauga and 香港六合彩资料 Scarborough hold events, host campus tours and organize workshops for international students, including a big welcome reception at the centre鈥檚 headquarters at Cumberland House. 

鈥淨uite literally the world comes to the 香港六合彩资料 Cumberland front yard and that's fantastic,鈥 says Luffman, who encourages all staff, faculty and students to attend the event on Sept. 15.

The centre will also be taking students on tours of neighbourhoods near the downtown Toronto campus, including Kensington Market, the Annex and Chinatown, to acquaint them with the city and local shops and restaurants.

During her first year, Tian found out about one of CIE鈥檚 most unique offerings 鈥 the . Looking for an opportunity to improve her English, she signed up to be a mentee. At the time, she admits, she didn鈥檛 know what mentorship meant, but thought it might be a good way to learn the language and better understand Canadian culture.

The iConnect program now has 312 participants from all over the university 鈥 undergraduate and graduate, with mentors offering support and advice while also organizing events across the city from ice skating to an afternoon at Brickworks.

Through the program, Tian was able to meet students from Canada and all over the world while getting the assistance she needed for university life 鈥 inspiring her to become a mentor in her second year.

Now in third year, she鈥檚 become an iConnect leader, in charge of selecting and working with a group of mentors and mentees. This exposure to different people and cultures would be hard to find outside of CIE, says Tian.

鈥淚t's something I couldn鈥檛 learn simply from the classroom or the courses I'm taking,鈥 she says.  

Instead of pairing mentors with students who are of similar cultural or academic backgrounds, iConnect matches students based on common interests, says the program鈥檚 co-ordinator, Asim Ashraf.

鈥淚t's a way to get international students to meet people across difference,鈥 he says.

For domestic students like Sophie Poppe Richter, who will be graduating in November with a double major in English and Spanish and a minor in Latin American studies, participating in iConnect is a chance to experience 香港六合彩资料鈥檚 rich global diversity without leaving the city.

鈥淚 really think that matching people from different cultures is important, especially in a city like Toronto where it's very multicultural and very much about learning from one another and meeting people from places sometimes you've never even heard of,鈥 says Poppe Richter, who met Tian through iConnect a year ago and still keeps in touch.   

Both domestic and international students can apply to be a mentor through iConnect, but applications are closed for this academic year.

The Bulletin Brief logo

Subscribe to The Bulletin Brief

UTC