poly

Being admitted to Poly may be the luckiest thing for me in four years.

When I first came to Poly Property, I felt like I was entering a maze of intricate structures. Featured alumni Hong Kong The floor from the wall to the platform is made of red brick. There are many seats and washbasin on campus, which is very human. The campus is open and anyone can come and go freely. The school also has a very good geographical location. It is located at the exit of Hung Hom MTR Station and is only one stop away from Tsim Sha Tsui or Mong Kok. It is also very convenient to walk to Tsim Sha Tsui.

The school library is the place I miss most. When I have nothing to do, I will soak in it, not because I love studying, but because it is too comfortable here. The air conditioner is always on, which makes you feel comfortable when you walk in. Internal facilities, powerful. There are separate quiet areas and discussion groups, each with several large computers for students to use for free. There are independent study rooms on the third and fifth floors, which are very spacious, and there are small rooms where group discussions can be held with white boards and monitors. Even the ordinary study area will have a certain degree of privacy. Basically, all the positions are cut off, and each position has a socket, which can be said to provide the greatest convenience for students to study.

We live in Hung Hom Old Hall, a place surrounded by food, about 15 minutes from the school, just across the bridge, past the subway station. This bridge is usually very busy. Free Newspapers are distributed every morning, street performers sometimes perform at night, and supporters vote for Yao later. The hostel in Hung Hom has a high degree of freedom. The Internet, electricity and water were not disrupted. My aunt comes twice a week to clean up the rubbish. The nave can cook on each floor. When I first came to Hong Kong, I couldn't wait to buy a spatula, oil, salt and so on. I wanted to practice cooking, but then I got busy.

Poly's courses are mainly divided into the following four levels, all of which are composed of lectures and experiments. For Grade 3 and Grade 4 classes, we need to do a group project. Some classes have both teachers and students. The teacher will definitely give the arrangement and grade weight of each class at the beginning of a semester. In Poly, there is no need to buy history textbooks. In each class, the teacher will print out the handouts in advance and send them to everyone. There are two different types of final grades, one is a test, which is practiced in the first semester, and the last is a science class. The teacher conducts an analysis test, and the score accounts for 30% of the total grade. The other is the exam, which accounts for 50% of the total score. It will be held in the exam month after the end of this semester. I developed two exams in a gymnasium that can accommodate 500 people at the same time, and the scene was spectacular.

I had four classes at Paulie's. The biggest difference between my experience at Paulie and my experience at school is freedom. No bells. The teacher is free to adjust the class time. I have two teachers who think 8:30 is too early and put it off until after 9:00. Students are also free to choose their own school hours so that teachers don't blame you and you don't have to worry about being disqualified even if you don't go to class. In one class, it wasn't until the day I spoke that I realized there were so many students in the class that less than half of them were listening. Of course, some teachers are very strict, for example, I have a class, a term of four consecutive terms

Test, knowledge check twice, almost once every two weeks, the laboratory is difficult. There will be many classes that don't talk about the necessity of expanding thinking, which once made me feel helpless and collapsed, but I did learn a lot of useful things in this course. Generally speaking, Paulie's class is not difficult, but the homework and experiment did not copy the written materials, which is still challenging. How much you learn depends entirely on your self-discipline.

Let's talk about two very interesting things about Poly Property, an organization called GSAP and an EXCELL course.

GSAP is a platform for students from different cultural backgrounds to communicate, and every GSAP member holds an activity every semester. I remember when I first arrived in Poly, I was fascinated by GSAP's ubiquitous posters, which included all kinds of activities. These activities are very interesting, such as making matcha, mixing noodles, drawing postcards and so on. And some outdoor activities in Diamond Hill and Lamma Island. At that time, I scanned almost every poster and signed up. I was deeply impressed by two outdoor activities in Lamma Island and Devil Mountain, and jiaozi in the dormitory. Through GSAP, I met many interesting and lovely people and left unforgettable and precious memories.

As well as taking technical courses, Poly Property offers a variety of student interest courses, known as EXCELL

Enrich lifelong learners, and the courses are taught by external teachers. They have to pay extra HK$ 50 yuan for each course. At that time, they couldn't make up their minds for a moment. They enrolled in five courses, including Cantonese, Spanish, Tree Expert, Starry Night in Hong Kong and Hip Hop Music. Unfortunately, some of them did not succeed. In retrospect, I still regret it. Tree experts and starry sky also took part in an outdoor course, from the perspective of non-tourists, on Taiping Mountain. I didn't see the bustling port, only a quiet jogging track, along which the teachers explained the plants and flowers along the way to the students. Unfortunately, the course is conducted in Cantonese, so I don't know anything.

admitted to Poly may The school library

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