Student Report Católica Lisbon School of Business and Economics

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Católica Lisbon School of Business and Economics

Student Report

Name of the University: Universidade Católica Portuguesa (UCP)

Exchange semester: Fall, 2015

I. PRACTICAL INFORMATION

Before leaving Norway

I received the practical information needed in good time before the semester started in

Portugal. If I had any questions I could easily email BI or UCP to get an answer. I found it challenging to fully understand the website of UCP and what I needed to do about selecting courses.

Travel

There is no need to get a Visa for travelling to Portugal, a valid passport is enough. I flew from Kjevik, Kristiansand, which was about 300 euros. I bought the tickets 10 days before leaving so you can usually find tickets from 1500-300 euros, depending on the date, place and time you are flying. TAP is the Portuguese airline, which I recommend highly.

The metro system looks like the metro system in Oslo, only simpler. I have little experience with bus/tram, but they seem to be quite easy to understand too. There is an app to check buses if needed.

Housing

There is no student housing at Católica, but if needed they will help you find a place to live. The Erasmus Office are also helpful, but be careful, the standard they showed us is not to the requirements we had so we went on websites and found an apartment in the city center on our own. For Erasmus students who rent for one semester is between

300-500 euros. I recommend going on Uniplaces.com or other webpages. We did not book housing before we left so we spent 1 week at a hostel because we wanted to see in person what we were renting.

We, a Swedish guy from BI and an American we met, rented an apartment in Rua

Garrett, a well-known touristy street in Baixa-Chiado. I higly recommend living in the city center, its close to everything, except from the university. It takes 30-40 minutes

Católica Lisbon School of Business and Economics to get to the university. We paid 500 each with everything included, but it was worth it. You can find cheaper places, but then you have to live with more people, smaller apartments or not in the center of Baixa-Chiado.

Costs

Rent NOK 5000/month

Books NOK 0/month.

Two of my courses had mandatory books, but you can find them as PDFs.

Everything was at the university’s internet-platform.

Food NOK 2000-3000, depends on if you eat out a lot or cook yourself

Transport NOK 350/month for metro card (bus,tram,train included)

Other NOK depends, activities and etc are cheap, but still a lot of money goes towards this

Culture and language

Most people in Lisbon speak English very well, and they understand even more. You will not have big language problems. The culture is in many ways not too far from the

Norwegian. People are nice and social, but students don’t automatically talk to you just because you are an exchange student. People are very social once you start talking with them, but we quickly learned that they value family-time on the weekends so don’t expect Portuguese to hang out with you on the weekends. They are also a fluidtime culture so if the say 2pm, its 2.30pm. .

II. ABOUT THE SCHOOL

Please describe:

The university is located in Lisbon, a little outside the city center but it is easy to get there by both metro and bus. The metro station is a 10 min walk from campus; you can take the blue line or the yellow line (blue line; Laranjeiras and Jardin Zoologico, Yellow line; Cidade Universitaria). All courses, as far as I am concerned, will be at the business faculty. It is an older building with a canteen, classrooms and auditoriums, and then you have a second building with a library, book store, copy store etc.

UCP accepts both bachelors and master students.

Course registration

You will receive an email from UCP that explains how and when you are to register for courses. Descriptions of all courses are to be found on their webpage, but be

Católica Lisbon School of Business and Economics careful to read about how the courses are graded. I do not recommend taking too many courses with group work/presentations as it is so far from what we are used to. The register process is all online. It’s first come first serve. You will most likely not get all of your first choices as you will get mostly electives and they often overlap. I had 4 rounds of changing courses. The course electing process can get very frustrating.

There is an add/drop period for the first week of school, so you will be able to change the courses to get a schedule that does not overlap. Unfortunately, I did not end up with many of the courses I wanted in the first place. They are very kind and helpful at the undergraduate office. They encounter these problems every semester

Academic calendar

Arrival date:

First day of the semester:

Last day of classes:

Examination period/midterms:

26.08 – Had to be present at the welcoming week which started on the 27th

02.09 – most classes start this week, some the following week

10.12

1 st - End of October – first mid term, not all courses have this

2 nd – from December 10 -1 january 14 th

You have 1 or 2 midterms that you need to pass in every subject. If you are unhappy with the grade you can take the final exam which is between January 14 th to the 23 rd

Arrival

I arrived a few days prior to the welcoming week to look for housing, get a sim-card, metro card etc. The welcoming week is only mandatory for the first day. UCP arranges trips, dinners, a waling-tour and etc. for you to get to know the city and other students.

It is recommended to be a part of these activities. I did not attend all, but the once I attended were quite okay, some better than other. The most important thing is that you get to know other students and see the city

The International Office

You find the international office/undergraduate office on the second floor. They people who work there are very helpful and understanding. They have encountered all kinds of problems, so your problems will be likely to be solved quickly. It is very hard to understand the system fully and that gets very frustrating. I found the system to be very inefficient and often lacking. It is very far from what we are used with at BI.

Católica Lisbon School of Business and Economics

Promoting BI and Norway

Catolica had an exchange fair where Ellen from the international office, another BI student and I promoted BI.

Social activities

Portuguese students are nice and helpful, but you will probably not encounter in many social activities outside of school with many of them. You will find many Erasmus students to hang out with which have the same goals for the semester as you do. Many

Erasmus students do not need to take 30 ECTs, so you will find that they have a lot more free time than you.

There are several organizations that are directed towards exchange students in Lisbon.

You have ELL and ESN who are the two biggest one. They arrange plenty of trips and activities; you can find something on their calendar almost every day. They are also present in social settings, at the clubs and in the bars, where you get discounts with your Erasmus or ELL card.

III. ACADEMICS

In the classroom

The course structure is very different from BI. There are approximately 30-40 people in each class. This means that you get to know your professors and classmates in a whole different way. You are graded on attendance, being active in class, group work, presentations etc. Teaching style varies from course to course, but most use power points and discuss the topics with you in class. Many courses have both theoretical and practical classes. In the theoretical you mostly sit an listen, some interaction, to the professor explaining the theories and things you need to learn. In the practical classes you do case studies, presentations, group work, discussions etc. The work load varies from course to course, but most courses are very demanding. There is always something that needs to be prepared for class. Your total grade is not based on one final exam. You are graded on everything you do in class and the midterm(s).

Almost all courses have mandatory attendance and you can only miss a certain amount of classes before you fail, so be aware of that. Since we do not even have books in the many of the courses, the midterms are often based on the lectures.

Católica Lisbon School of Business and Economics

The grading system is very different too. They have a system of 0-20, where 0-9,5 is a fail and above this is a pass. You are allowed to take the final exam (which can be looked on as a “make-up” exam) if you get an 8 or above, or if you want to improve your grade. The final exam will then count for 100% of the grade.

Exams

The exam is mostly based on the lectures and material provided to you by the teacher

The course evaluation depends on which course you take but in general you have; o Final exam, not mandatory, only to improve grades o Mid-term exam, 1 or 2 in every course o In-class quizzes throughout semester in a few courses o Small assignments and/or papers, in many courses o Presentations, in most courses o Group work, in most courses o Class attendance, in close to all courses o Class participation/debates, in most courses

Library and technology

There is a library on campus and computer rooms.

Description of courses

The description of the courses may be changed from one year to another, so I recommend you to read the syllabus carefully.

Strategy 6 ECT:

I chose strategy as it was mandatory from BI to have a strategy couse. In this course you have both practical and theoretical classes. One theoretical and two practical. The teacher for the theoretical class is a german who is very good at explaining the theories and interacting, this is not mandatory to attend but you should. It will help you in the end.

I did not like the practical classes too much, we had to read one case of 15-20 pages for each class and discuss it. It was very hard to understand what the teacher was asking for.

You have two group presentations and one group project to do in this course.

Portuguese Language Course 4,5 ECT:

Two classes a week, altogether 4,5 hours per week. You are graded 40% on participation, homework, small tests, being active and then you have two mid-terms. I highly recommend to

Católica Lisbon School of Business and Economics take Portuguese, but the teacher go through the stuff very quickly due to the fact that there often are many Spanish/French/Italian in the class who because of their native language understand a lot already.

Bank Management 5 ECT:

This was my finance class that I was required to take. The teacher is very nice, but unfortunately he was in the middle of getting a new position at his regular job so we had to skip many classes and make up the classes by having double classes on some days. Bank

Management is nothing like what we have had at BI, and many of the other students have had this type of course previously so you easily fall behind. The good thing is that there is not group work or assignments to do.

Product and Costumer Management 5 ECT:

This is a marketing course. We only had a 30 page assignment, it varies each semester. The professor’s slides in class are supposed to be enough to pass the course. The assignment were interesting, but unfortunately I was in a group with only Portuguese so it was difficult to get started and hand in a good project. The professor is very nice, and as long as you pay attention and sometimes ask him questions after class he will like you. The workload was manageable and I recommend this course.

Global Marketing 5 ECT:

This is the best course I had this semester due to the fact that the professor was very interacting and if your answer was wrong he still appreciated your effort. There are reading to be done for every class, it takes approximately one hour to due the reading and take notes. He gives “surprise” tests sometimes to check if you have done the readings. We had one debate where you are divided into groups. You are not graded on this, it counts as participation. It is an easy and good course compared to may of the other, as long as you pay attention and try to participate.

Information Management ERA 5 ECT:

I ended up with this subject after changing courses for the fourth time. The two professors teaching this course are very nice and understanding. I had no experience with IT/IS, which is

Católica Lisbon School of Business and Economics what the course is mainly about. The thing that made me dislike the course is all the group works that had to be done for each class, because I was in a group with only Portuguese girls who never did anything until the deadline, so neither could you. Do not get in a group which consist of mostly Portuguese. If you stay away from being in groups that consist of mostly

Portuguese then you will do fine in the course and like it!

On a final note, how will you sum up the exchange experience?

I LOVE LISBON. The city is so beautiful, people are nice and the prices are good. It is a very safe city and you can walk everywhere without being afraid of being pick-pocketed, except from in the very touristy areas of course. There is a lot of cultural things to see and to, many nice cities and it is fairly cheap to travel around in Portugal.

You get to know a lot of people, mostly exchange students, and you do a lot of stuff together.

The weather is very nice compared to the cold winters in Norway.

Unfortunately, the school proved to be too demanding. The system and structure made it hard to enjoy the experience as much as I wanted. My schedule was very bad. I had classes from early in the morning to around 8 at night, many hours between classes so I could always go home, which I did in the beginning, but towards the end there was simply too much school work to be done so I stayed at school most of the time. Since exchange students usually take the elective courses they are very spread in terms of time. Also, I had 6 courses to get the 30

ECTs so it made it very demanding. All the professors make you present the final projects in the same week or the same day, there is no collaboration at all. And when it is group work then you are dependent on other people to do their part, which they do not always do, and many Portuguese just postpone everything to the last minute.

Some final words, the city is amazing. I do not regret choosing Lisbon, Portugal. I do not know if I would choose UCP if I could decide all over again. Its simply too demanding and unstructured for a person like me. I am used to the opposite, I am used to BI standards. The good thing though, is that you learn a lot about yourself and many of the problems I have had here are problems I will encounter later on when I start working for a company. Also, since our grades do not go onto our GPA it is “less” stressful. It is a good indicator for how demanding my masters will be.

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