An American in Germany or a German in America? Or maybe both? Simon Hoeps, exchange student from the University of Rhode Island (URI), certainly fits the bill. When we meet at the HAW Hamburg Berliner Tor Campus, Simon starts the conversation in fluent German and then continues the interview at my request in fluent English. 'I was born in Germany of German parents, but we moved to the US when I was 10 years old,' he explains. 'We speak German at home and visit family in Germany regularly, so with my family I feel German, but with my friends in Connecticut I feel more American because we share the same childhood experiences. I suppose I grew up in two countries.'
Simon is currently in his fourth year of the URI International Business Program (IBP)* with a focus on supply chains. And to complement his German-American background this part of his degree is not being spent in the US but in Germany, where he is completing a study and internship year. If this sounds like a foregone conclusion for someone with Simon’s background, then you would be mistaken. 'I originally wasn’t thinking of studying at all,' he admits. 'I was sick of school and was thinking instead of going straight into a job after high school. But my parents convinced me that I would have more options if I studied, so I looked at different business schools. Engineering wasn’t an option because it was too much math,' he adds, laughing. Having decided to apply for the supply chain management degree at URI, it was only at the 'Accepted Students’ Day' that he learned about IBP from the German department. 'When I heard that I would be doing an internship in Germany as part of the programme, I knew that was what I wanted to do.'
International Business Program (IBP) offers a global experience
IBP is a five-year programme of business courses and language studies. Graduates earn two degrees from URI. It is designed to meet the needs of business and industry in the rapidly evolving global marketplace and to prepare students for international careers. With Simon’s background he was obviously put into the upper-level German classes, but this is not a requirement. Students are put into a class that matches their language level, and with additional intensive summer programmes they can acquire the necessary B2 German before they go abroad. Simon also got a lot of support from IBP alumni. 'I met Claudia (Krah) at URI when I was a freshman. I already knew her from the German Saturday School that I had gone to as a child and she was a big help, giving me lots of tips. And Kayla (Lombardi) had been to Hamburg two years before me and was able to give me a more detailed view about scholarships and classes.'
Simon has just spent his first semester in Germany, studying at HAW Hamburg, where he took classes (in English) in International Business Law, FDI, Trade and Logistics, International Management, and International Organisation and Cooperation. How does he feel these classes have added to his business expertise? 'At URI we focused on logistics within the US. In my Hamburg classes we looked at trade between countries and what you have to bear in mind when you are working on a global scale. My favourite class was International Business Law, because we got to look at international investments, how you would work in an international environment and at law from an international business perspective.'