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Student report first SOLVE Erasmus+ project meeting

On Monday 13th February, members of our Erasmus+ after school club got ready
and prepared for the first transnational project meeting of SOLVE which is a
common European project of five schools from Czech Republic, Germany, Italia,
Portugal and Spain. The project is coordinated by our Spanish partners from IES
Jos Segrelles in Albaida, and this is also where our initial student meeting was
hosted. Travelling to the Spanish town of Albaida we had to fly to the closest city,
Valencia.

On our first day, we finally met the pupils from our partnering schools from
Portugal, Italy, Czech Republic and of course, Spain, in person. Each of us then
spent the rest of the day with our host partner. Looking back we were extremely
thankful for the smooth organization by the Spanish teachers, in particular for the
fact that we were matched very well with our host students and families.
On Tuesday, the first full day of our meeting, we split into mixed groups and
played icebreaker games to get to know each other. After that, we continued to
socialize and grow together as a group. Surprisingly and despite different levels
of English, we managed to communicate perfectly fine and to exchange ideas for
and experiences with the project. Trying to get their visitors accustomed to the
local context, the Spanish pupils gave us, the international students, a guided
tour of their school. From the outside, the school looks very modern but inside, its
design is rather traditional. After the break we resumed the session and turned to
the findings from our research, the web quest and surveys we had conducted
prior to the transnational meeting in weekly afterschool project work at our local
schools. The presentation of each schools findings focused on the current state
of youth unemployment and school dropouts in our countries, regions and
schools. We were prepared to present the results in a quite innovative
PechaKucha presentation, but soon came to realize that a more conventional type
of PowerPoint presentation would do the complex realities of the findings more
justice. It was very interesting to learn again how different the situation at each
school actually is and how it determines measures, needs and interests to deal
with the issue.
Our lunch break was definitely well-deserved. It offered the delicious taste of a
traditional Spanish dish, paella. After our meal, our Spanish pupils took us on a
guided tour around Albaida. The town is very nice with quite a number of
historical sandstone buildings such as the church that we visited, which was very
beautiful. Yet some of us German students were surprised to spot a number of
rather run down areas.
Later that afternoon the mayor of Albaida welcomed us and suggested that we
should go to the doll museum. Admittedly, the dolls were well-made, but still they
looked a bit creepy.
Afterwards, the official part was over and we had some free time to spend with
our host partners.
The next day, we met at 7am in front of the high school from where we would
take a bus to the regional capital of Valencia. Arriving in the city, we first visited
the House of (the regional) Parliament for a guided tour through the historical
building. We were stunned by its grandeur and thankful for the exclusive tour we
were offered. After that we took a break in front of the basilica, which is made of
three different architectural styles. In the afternoon we had about three hours to
explore Valencia, which we agreed is a beautiful city and definitely a must-see in
the region.
On Thursday, February 16th, we got back to work to paint the Erasmus logo on the
schools wall in order to promote and raise awareness to the project at IES
Student report first SOLVE Erasmus+ project meeting

Segrelles and to make sure that we would keep the project and the project would
keep us in good memory. We continued with the so-called country exhibition,
which is a fair of traditional and typical products as well as flyers and material
presenting the municipalities and regions which are schools come from. Coming
full circle to our first day where we started to learn more about our schools and
regions as the context for our research, we watched promo videos each school
had filmed as a means to advertise SOLVE at their local schools and on social
media. Having finished work we spent time in our host families before we met a
last time in the evening for our farewell party. There we ate, danced, talked and
had fun together ending the project meeting in style.

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