 So, the experiences in Pratt College have always been positive for me. When I came here into the building, I always felt the personal approach with students, with teachers. The relationship is closer than what you get in larger universities. You can solve your problems and your questions in a more intimate way. You get to ask things that you don't usually get to ask. So, you may ask your lecturers about things that are outside of the curriculum, maybe even some personal things, some things that may help you later in your career. So, things like that, they always touch my heart a little bit. So, I'm going to talk about my first school year when I came from school directly. And this is mostly directed at people who are coming from the school to the college. So, during my first classes I felt that there is a similar setting in terms of size and how many people are in class and the teacher. But the relationships have changed and you have to not be only a passive receiver of information in that class. You should feel more engaged and you should interact in that class. You should sometimes even take ownership and responsibility as to what is going to happen in a class. So, for example, it happened to us that we finished our curriculum before the semester ended and it was up to us to decide what we wanted to learn next. So, we had to agree as a class on the topic that interests all of us and the teacher would then go on to present it and we could even have a mature discussion about the topic. So, on a different level, you're no longer just a student, you can also participate on a higher level. I felt maybe confusion at first. I wasn't prepared for that and it took some time to get used to this. But after that you feel empowered to actually have more control of what you want to do in the class. As students we always have obstacles and most of them are caused by ourselves. As I found out, because we delay our work or we don't ask questions in a timely manner but most of this can be fixed I think by having good relationships with your lecturers and listening to their feedback when they have some and when you get yourself into time pressure or maybe you have no idea what you should do on the assignment. It's never a good thing to isolate yourself and it's always better to ask for help and communicate with your teachers and if you maintain a good relationship with them I think they will always be willing to help you. So, that's the way I solved most of my obstacles during my studies. So, my career started in a very interesting way. I haven't planned actually to start working. We had a job fair here in Prague College on the underground level. We had a job fair and there were a bunch of companies which came and I participated. I spoke with multiple of them. I chose Epic 2 that I liked and I just visited Open Doors Day on the days that they suggested. One of them was NCR and NCR at the end of the Open Doors Day they asked me to write an internship test which I did and they liked it so we agreed that I could join some team that I liked in the company. How quickly I found my job? I would say very quickly considering that I haven't actually looked for it deliberately and the moment that I got the opportunity to start working it just happened on its own. I would say that this was the specific case of preparation meets opportunity. I was prepared for that and it just happened. It was a multiple-stage process of me finding the job, let's say. I started out as an intern. I wrote the internship test and they asked me maybe I want to do immediately the part-time so I wrote the part-time test as well but I didn't have time to actually because they need some specific amount of time to be at work to make it work. So I started out as an intern and I've been an intern for half a year and then I moved on to the part-time job because it was the point in my life when the work itself has started helping me in my academic work and I started feeling that the stuff in the college gets easier because I also work on myself at work and so I was able to combine those two things at the same time and then when I graduated I immediately moved to the full-time employee position. I was always applying things that we learned here maybe not on all of the subjects but definitely subjects like databases and programming in Java and also C-Sharp I was applying those things from the get-go and there's also some cross dissemination from work to college and it goes both ways. So you learn some things at work, it makes it easier at college. You learn some things at college, you understand something at work and this is a very nice process when you start feeling that's happening. You start growing much faster than if you just have one so I would definitely suggest students to look for something like that or look for an internship or a part-time position. Right now I'm satisfied with where I am in terms of career and I try to focus more on my personal development and you shouldn't forget that that's also an important part of your life but for my future plans I don't want to forget that I should be a permanent student because we are in IT sphere and engineering sphere and if you lose track of where you are in terms of your knowledge you can become outdated very fast. So you can either learn by yourself at work or in your free time which is what I'm doing right now or if I decide to switch positions or maybe switch projects to something that will interest me in a different way when it interests me right now I would definitely look into getting more formal education in terms of masters in a specific computing area.