성공 유학, 성공 어학연수 G멘토

성공 유학, 성공 어학연수 G멘토

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GCN Education Corp,.Professional Education Consulting GroupGreat Success with GCN agency성공유학 미국/영국/캐나다/호주/아일랜드/뉴질랜드/필리핀/인도/말레이시아
전문상담 Specialist

Photos 14/01/2014

성공 연수금 획득!!! 뉴욕에서 공부하신 최*주님의 성공 연수기입니다~ 축하 합니다.
1. 연수한 나라와 지역은 어디인가요? 미국 뉴욕입니다.

2. 선택하신 프로그램은 무엇인가요? Make your own이라는 프로그램입니다.

3. 연수기간은 얼마나 되셨나요? 총 7~8개월정도 머물렀습니다.

4. 공부하신 어학교는 어디인가요? 미국 뉴욕에 있는 st.giles어학원입니다.

5. 일반적인 어학연수를 계획하시는 데 있어서 특별히 GCN유학의 프로그램을 선택하신 이유는 무엇인가요? 지인들의 이야기, 인터넷을 많이 검색해보던중에 gcn어학원에서는 많은 프로그램이 있었고 특히, make your own이라는 프로그램중이 마음에 들어서 선택하게 되었습니다.

6. GCN유학회사만이 제공하고 있는 프로그램의 성공장학금이 연수하시는데 있어 의욕고취의 도움이 되셨나요? 네, 무척이나 도움이 많이 되었죠. 날씨가 너무 춥거나, 비가 너무 많이 오거나 몸이 좀 아픈날에는 정말 빠지고싶은 마음은 굴뚝같지만 정말 목표 하나만 보고 끝까지 성공했던 것 같습니다.

7. GCN유학회사의 다음 학생들을 위해 뉴욕의 현지 식사비 물가 ( 패스트푸드/한식/기타 메뉴별)에 대한 좋은 정보 부탁드려요. ^^
우선 뉴욕의 물가는 무척이나 비쌉니다. 패스트 푸드도 최소 $7~10 정도까지도 하였고 한식 같은 경우에도 최소 $15~20정도는 들 정도니깐요. 그런데 여기에 팁까지 주어야하니 한끼를 먹어도 최소 $20~30정도는 들었습니다. 그렇지만 한가지 좋은점은 음식점에서 먹는 음식들은 무척이나 비싸지만 식재료만큼은 그렇게 비싸지않고 상태도 매우 좋습니다. 그래서 밖에서도 많이 사먹었지만 친구들과 모여서 요리도 많이 해먹고 하였습니다.

U.S.A. 11/07/2012
U.S.A. 06/07/2012

Kaplan International Colleges, 샌디에고

Photos 02/07/2012

[GCN유학_성공어학연수 장학금 수여자 노시은님]

[파인스 어학원(바기오) 성공 연수 노시은 님의 Interview]

► 세계필 성공보수금이 연수하시면서 도움이 되었나요? : 네~!! 마지막 달이 되면 아무래도 학생이 많이 흐트러지고, 스파르타 시스템에 지치더라고요. 그러다보면 아침수업을 빠지는 학생들이 늘어갑니다. 하지만 저는 성공보수금이 저를 자극하는 자극제가 되어 끝까지 흐트러지지 않고 열심히 할 수 있었습니다.

► 현지 식사비 물가 (패스트푸드 메뉴별/한식 메뉴별/기타 메뉴별) : 일반적으로 패스트 푸드(졸리비,맥도날드,는 100페소 안팎입니다. 한식은 대부분의 메뉴들이 한국물가와 같거나 1000원 2000원 정도 비싼 편입니다. 예를 들어 감자탕 大 890페소 정도 합니다. 필리핀 음식점에서 스테이크 종류는 100~250페소 정도 합니다.

► 현지 교통비 물가 (트라이시클/지프니/택시 등) : 트라이시클은 산페르난도로 여행갔을 때 이용했는데 20분정도되는 거리에 100페소 정도 지불하였고, 지프니는 8~10페소, 택시는 기본요금 39페소입니다. 친구들과 함께 다녀서 저는 대부분 택시를 이용하였습니다. 일반적오로 최대 100페소를 넘기지 않습니다.

► 한달 순수하게 용돈으로만 쓰는 비용 : 저는 한달에 한번 여행을 꼭 다녀서 한달에 30만원 정도 사용했습니다. 여행을 제외하면 20만원정도 사용한것 같습니다. 평일에는 거의 사용하지 않고 주말에만 돈을 쓰게 되므로 그렇게 많이 용돈이 많이 들어가지는 않지만, 선생님과 친구들과 어울리다 보면 하루에 1000페소는 사용했던것 같습니다.

► 기타 비용에 관련된 조언 사항 : 학원이 스파르타이기 때문에 머리를 식히기 위해 한달에 한번은 여행을 다녀오는것도 좋은 방법인것 같습니다. 한국에서 필리핀에 여행을 오면 많은 비용이 드는데 현지에서 여행을 가면 그렇게 비용이 많이 드는것 도 아니고 좋은 추억도 되고 좋은거 같습니다. 꼭 여행을 다녀볼 것을 추천합니다.

► 바기오 지역의 장점 : 바기오 지역의 학원은 대부분이 스파르타입니다. 그래서 더 영어공부에 집중할 수 있었습니다. 또한 날씨가 매우 선선하여 공부하기 좋은 날씨입니다.

► 바기오 지역의 단점 : 비가 자주 온다는 단점이 있습니다. 또한 필리핀 지역임에도 불구하고 조금 춥다는 단점이 있습니다. 그리고 필리핀임에도 바다를 보기 힘들다는게 단점입니다.

► 연수하신 학교의 장점 (예:선생님이 좋다던지, 위치가 좋다던지, 수업이 좋다던지..) : 선생님들이 대부분이 실력이 좋고, 위치적으로도 바기오 시내에 위치하여 60페소면 시내에 어디든 갈 수 있습니다. 수업또한 일반적인 스피킹 수업부터 토익스피킹 오픽 등의 여러 모듈을 신청할 수 있습니다.

► 연수하신 학교의 단점 : 선생님과 수업은 좋지만, 매니저들은 솔직히 별로 입니다. 학생들을 심하게 단속하는 것은 좋지만, 학생들의 불만도 수용할 줄 아는 자세가 필요한듯 싶습니다. 또한 졸업하는 학생들의 안전에 대해서는 무관심한듯 싶습니다.

► 우리학교 추천 수업/과목 (예: 1:1 수업이 좋은데, 무엇무엇 때문에 좋다..) : 1:1 수업도 좋고, 3:1 패턴수업과, 토론수업도 굉장히 좋습니다. 한번씩 영어 프레젠테이션도 하고, 도움이 많이 됩니다. 특히 패턴 수업같은 경우, 굉장히 도움이 많이 되었습니다.

► 우리학교 만족도 (100% 중 몇 %?) : 80%

► 그 이유는? : 앞에서 말했듯이 수업, 선생님 모두 만족스럽지만, 매니저들이 매우 불만족스러웠기때문이다.

► 내가 생각하는 추천 여행지 및 여행경비 : 헌드레드아일렌드 ( 3000페소) 사가다 (2500페소) 산페르난도+산황(1500페소)

► 나의 하루 일과 (예:몇시에 일어나서, 언제부터 언제까지 수업, 언제 쉬고, 언제 저녁먹고, 그 이후에는 무얼하는지..)
아침 7시에 일어나서 밥을 먹고, 8시부터 수업을 시작하여, 12시까지 오전수업을 하고, 점심을 먹고, 1시부터 6시까지 오후 수업을 하고, 6시부터 7시까지 저녁을 먹고, 7시 반부터 옵션수업을 들었습니다. 옵션 수업을 들은 후에는 보통 12시까지 Self Study를 하였습니다.

► 기타 주의해야 할 생활정보, 숙소정보, 준비물 등 생활에 관해서 조언하고 싶은 사항 : 우기가 6~9월 입니다. 그때 바기오 지역으로 가신다면 꼭 따뜻한옷 들고 가는게 좋습니다.

► 본인이 공부하면서 실천하지 못했던 부분을, 후배들은 꼭 실천을 하여, 성공할 수 있는 비결 3가지를 조언해 주신다면?
1. 선생님들과 친하게 지내세요. 도움 많이 됩니다.
2. 자신을 놓지 마세요 . 끝까지 열심히 공부하세요. 막 달에 많이 흐트러집니다.
3. 공부하고 오세요. 기본적으로 꼭 문법을 정리하고 오세요

Princeton Baccalaureate 2012: Michael Lewis 27/06/2012

[GCN유학 _ Good and Lasting Memorial]

영화 Moneyball의 작가 Micheal Lewis 가 Princeton 대학교 졸업식에서 한 연설이 참 감동적입니다.
우리 GCN학생분들과 모두 함께 나누고 싶어 올려요.

"Don't Eat Fortune's Cookie"
Michael Lewis
June 3, 2012 — As Prepared
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CiQ_T5C3hIM&feature=relmfu

(NOTE: The video of Lewis' speech as delivered is available on the Princeton YouTube channel.)

Thank you. President Tilghman. Trustees and Friends. Parents of the Class of 2012. Above all, Members of the Princeton Class of 2012. Give yourself a round of applause. The next time you look around a church and see everyone dressed in black it'll be awkward to cheer. Enjoy the moment.

Thirty years ago I sat where you sat. I must have listened to some older person share his life experience. But I don't remember a word of it. I can't even tell you who spoke. What I do remember, vividly, is graduation. I'm told you're meant to be excited, perhaps even relieved, and maybe all of you are. I wasn't. I was totally outraged. Here I’d gone and given them four of the best years of my life and this is how they thanked me for it. By kicking me out.

At that moment I was sure of only one thing: I was of no possible economic value to the outside world. I'd majored in art history, for a start. Even then this was regarded as an act of insanity. I was almost certainly less prepared for the marketplace than most of you. Yet somehow I have wound up rich and famous. Well, sort of. I'm going to explain, briefly, how that happened. I want you to understand just how mysterious careers can be, before you go out and have one yourself.

I graduated from Princeton without ever having published a word of anything, anywhere. I didn't write for the Prince, or for anyone else. But at Princeton, studying art history, I felt the first twinge of literary ambition. It happened while working on my senior thesis. My adviser was a truly gifted professor, an archaeologist named William Childs. The thesis tried to explain how the Italian sculptor Donatello used Greek and Roman sculpture — which is actually totally beside the point, but I've always wanted to tell someone. God knows what Professor Childs actually thought of it, but he helped me to become engrossed. More than engrossed: obsessed. When I handed it in I knew what I wanted to do for the rest of my life: to write senior theses. Or, to put it differently: to write books.

Then I went to my thesis defense. It was just a few yards from here, in McCormick Hall. I listened and waited for Professor Childs to say how well written my thesis was. He didn't. And so after about 45 minutes I finally said, "So. What did you think of the writing?"

"Put it this way" he said. "Never try to make a living at it."

And I didn't — not really. I did what everyone does who has no idea what to do with themselves: I went to graduate school. I wrote at nights, without much effect, mainly because I hadn't the first clue what I should write about. One night I was invited to a dinner, where I sat next to the wife of a big shot at a giant Wall Street investment bank, called Salomon Brothers. She more or less forced her husband to give me a job. I knew next to nothing about Salomon Brothers. But Salomon Brothers happened to be where Wall Street was being reinvented—into the place we have all come to know and love. When I got there I was assigned, almost arbitrarily, to the very best job in which to observe the growing madness: they turned me into the house expert on derivatives. A year and a half later Salomon Brothers was handing me a check for hundreds of thousands of dollars to give advice about derivatives to professional investors.

Now I had something to write about: Salomon Brothers. Wall Street had become so unhinged that it was paying recent Princeton graduates who knew nothing about money small fortunes to pretend to be experts about money. I'd stumbled into my next senior thesis.

I called up my father. I told him I was going to quit this job that now promised me millions of dollars to write a book for an advance of 40 grand. There was a long pause on the other end of the line. "You might just want to think about that," he said.

"Why?"

"Stay at Salomon Brothers 10 years, make your fortune, and then write your books," he said.

I didn't need to think about it. I knew what intellectual passion felt like — because I'd felt it here, at Princeton — and I wanted to feel it again. I was 26 years old. Had I waited until I was 36, I would never have done it. I would have forgotten the feeling.

The book I wrote was called "Liar’s Poker." It sold a million copies. I was 28 years old. I had a career, a little fame, a small fortune and a new life narrative. All of a sudden people were telling me I was born to be a writer. This was absurd. Even I could see there was another, truer narrative, with luck as its theme. What were the odds of being seated at that dinner next to that Salomon Brothers lady? Of landing inside the best Wall Street firm from which to write the story of an age? Of landing in the seat with the best view of the business? Of having parents who didn't disinherit me but instead sighed and said "do it if you must?" Of having had that sense of must kindled inside me by a professor of art history at Princeton? Of having been let into Princeton in the first place?

This isn't just false humility. It's false humility with a point. My case illustrates how success is always rationalized. People really don’t like to hear success explained away as luck — especially successful people. As they age, and succeed, people feel their success was somehow inevitable. They don't want to acknowledge the role played by accident in their lives. There is a reason for this: the world does not want to acknowledge it either.

I wrote a book about this, called "Moneyball." It was ostensibly about baseball but was in fact about something else. There are poor teams and rich teams in professional baseball, and they spend radically different sums of money on their players. When I wrote my book the richest team in professional baseball, the New York Yankees, was then spending about $120 million on its 25 players. The poorest team, the Oakland A's, was spending about $30 million. And yet the Oakland team was winning as many games as the Yankees — and more than all the other richer teams.

This isn't supposed to happen. In theory, the rich teams should buy the best players and win all the time. But the Oakland team had figured something out: the rich teams didn't really understand who the best baseball players were. The players were misvalued. And the biggest single reason they were misvalued was that the experts did not pay sufficient attention to the role of luck in baseball success. Players got given credit for things they did that depended on the performance of others: pitchers got paid for winning games, hitters got paid for knocking in runners on base. Players got blamed and credited for events beyond their control. Where balls that got hit happened to land on the field, for example.

Forget baseball, forget sports. Here you had these corporate employees, paid millions of dollars a year. They were doing exactly the same job that people in their business had been doing forever. In front of millions of people, who evaluate their every move. They had statistics attached to everything they did. And yet they were misvalued — because the wider world was blind to their luck.

This had been going on for a century. Right under all of our noses. And no one noticed — until it paid a poor team so well to notice that they could not afford not to notice. And you have to ask: if a professional athlete paid millions of dollars can be misvalued who can't be? If the supposedly pure meritocracy of professional sports can't distinguish between lucky and good, who can?

The "Moneyball" story has practical implications. If you use better data, you can find better values; there are always market inefficiencies to exploit, and so on. But it has a broader and less practical message: don't be deceived by life's outcomes. Life's outcomes, while not entirely random, have a huge amount of luck baked into them. Above all, recognize that if you have had success, you have also had luck — and with luck comes obligation. You owe a debt, and not just to your Gods. You owe a debt to the unlucky.

I make this point because — along with this speech — it is something that will be easy for you to forget.

I now live in Berkeley, California. A few years ago, just a few blocks from my home, a pair of researchers in the Cal psychology department staged an experiment. They began by grabbing students, as lab rats. Then they broke the students into teams, segregated by s*x. Three men, or three women, per team. Then they put these teams of three into a room, and arbitrarily assigned one of the three to act as leader. Then they gave them some complicated moral problem to solve: say what should be done about academic cheating, or how to regulate drinking on campus.

Exactly 30 minutes into the problem-solving the researchers interrupted each group. They entered the room bearing a plate of cookies. Four cookies. The team consisted of three people, but there were these four cookies. Every team member obviously got one cookie, but that left a fourth cookie, just sitting there. It should have been awkward. But it wasn't. With incredible consistency the person arbitrarily appointed leader of the group grabbed the fourth cookie, and ate it. Not only ate it, but ate it with gusto: lips smacking, mouth open, drool at the corners of their mouths. In the end all that was left of the extra cookie were crumbs on the leader's shirt.

This leader had performed no special task. He had no special virtue. He'd been chosen at random, 30 minutes earlier. His status was nothing but luck. But it still left him with the sense that the cookie should be his.

This experiment helps to explain Wall Street bonuses and CEO pay, and I'm sure lots of other human behavior. But it also is relevant to new graduates of Princeton University. In a general sort of way you have been appointed the leader of the group. Your appointment may not be entirely arbitrary. But you must sense its arbitrary aspect: you are the lucky few. Lucky in your parents, lucky in your country, lucky that a place like Princeton exists that can take in lucky people, introduce them to other lucky people, and increase their chances of becoming even luckier. Lucky that you live in the richest society the world has ever seen, in a time when no one actually expects you to sacrifice your interests to anything.

All of you have been faced with the extra cookie. All of you will be faced with many more of them. In time you will find it easy to assume that you deserve the extra cookie. For all I know, you may. But you'll be happier, and the world will be better off, if you at least pretend that you don't.

Never forget: In the nation's service. In the service of all nations.

Thank you.

And good luck.

Princeton Baccalaureate 2012: Michael Lewis Michael Lewis, a member of Princeton's Class of 1982 and author of such books as "Liar's Poker" and "Moneyball," speaks at the 2012 Baccalaureate in a speech...

31/05/2012

[GCN유학_어학연수프로그램안내]

미국에서 영어연수도 하고 미국회사에서 전문인턴쉽까지 한다!!

프로그램 : 어학연수+비즈니스영어+인턴쉽 프로그램
연수기간 : 6개월/9개월 (조정가능)
연수지역 : 샌프란시스코/샌디에고/시카고

일반영어연수 프로그램에 비즈니스 자격증과정을 추가하여 원하는 분야의 미국회사에서 정식으로 인턴쉽을 하여 경력까지 쌓을수 있는 일석이조의 프로그램입니다.

http://www.globalok.net/package/?idx=12&na=usa&page=view_content_detail

(주)GCN 유학-어학연수, 정규유학, 조기유학, 이민 전문회사, 미국어학연수, 캐나다어학연수, 영국어학연수, 필리핀어학연수, 영국어학연수, 뉴질랜드어학연수, 호주어학연수

14/05/2012

[GCN유학_어학연수프로그램안내]

미국 사설어학교 + 명문대학부설 프로그램

2. Luxury Program (럭셔리프로그램)
연수기간 : 7개월 (조정가능)
연수구성 : 사설어학교 3개월 회화집중프로그램
명문대학부설 3개월 아카데믹영어프로그램
학교 : 사설어학교 선택 + U_Penn (University of Pennsylvania)
프로그램비용 : 1499만원

프로그램 포함내역
-사설어학교 등록비 및 모든과정 학비
-펜실베니아 대학부설 영어과정 등록비 및 모든과정 학비
-공항픽업비
-기숙사혹은 홈스테이 숙소알선비
-GCN유학 미국전문 수속비

* 위의 프로그램은,

어학연수의 초반부에는 사설어학교의
소규모 회화수업이 더 적합하며, 개별적으로 친밀한 케어가 가능하고, 말하기와 듣기위주로 진행되는 최고의사설학교에서 시작하는 것이 적합하기 때문이며,

어학연수의 중후반부에는,
최고의 명문대학부설에서 최상급프로그램영어를 배울 수 있는 아카데믹한 미국대학부설,
미국대학부설의 진수를 맛볼 수 있습니다.
작문과 프리젠테이션에 집중된 코스로 한층 더 수준높은 영어과정 프로그램으로 전체연수일정을 마무리 할 수 있기 때문에 많은 학생들에게 선택의 대상이 됩니다.

대학부설은 1년에 4번 혹은 5번 정도 학기에 맞추어 개강하기 때문에, 대학부설수업에 맞추어 사설어학교의 스케줄을 조정하시면 언제든 내가 원하는 시기에 맞추어 어학연수를 시작하실 수 있습니다.

http://www.globalok.net/package/?idx=5&na=usa&page=view_content_detail

(주)GCN 유학-어학연수, 정규유학, 조기유학, 이민 전문회사, 미국어학연수, 캐나다어학연수, 영국어학연수, 필리핀어학연수, 영국어학연수, 뉴질랜드어학연수, 호주어학연수

U.S.A. 14/05/2012

샌디에고의 명문대학부설 University of California, San Diego (UCSD) 의 대학캠퍼스를 소개합니다. 아카데믹하고 질좋은 영어프로그램으로 유명합니다.

U.S.A. 11/05/2012

한국학생에게 유우명한 카플란 어학교의 샌디에고 캠퍼스입니다.

U.S.A. 24/04/2012

샌디에고의 회화중심적인 캐쥬얼한 분위기의 어학교 EmbassyCES 입니다. 놀기 좋아하는 남미학생들에게 인기가 많은 학교예요 ^^

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