 Hi, my name is Tim Rose. I'm one of the teachers of the Creative Media and Game Technology program. My biggest piece of advice for the new students here at Saxon is to join one of our students' associations. I think it's the best and the most easiest way to get to know our students and make some new friends. At Saxon we have a different approach in how we do our lectures. For example, the teacher expects from you to be very interactive. You will ask questions and you will ask for your opinion. And don't be scared to give your opinion because we respect all opinions of our students. So in class it's okay to call the teacher by his first name. We have a different view on this than you probably are used to, but we see teachers and students as equal. My name is Martijn Ter Schregert. I'm a teacher at the Academy for Creative Technology. And I mostly teach software engineering courses, so various programming courses mostly. I see a lot of Eastern European students used to more formal types of teaching. We have to get used a bit to more project-oriented way of teaching that we do, more practically oriented. And for East Asian students they have to get used to the fairly egalitarian way we do things here. The teacher is just as much a normal person as a student. So it takes a while for students to really find their comfort zone around here. But usually after several weeks to several months they get it. And students really start to feel at home by that time. By now I teach first year students and most of them call me by my first name. You're going to study IT, so make sure you're opening a laptop. Because that's what you'll be working on mostly. Apart from that, bring an inquisitive mind. You're not here to be filled up with knowledge, you're here to basically show us how curious you can be. Hi, I'm Susanna. I teach in media information and communications. The specific topics I teach are media training, creative writing, copywriting, that sort of thing. German students are actually quite good. Their approach to studying is really good. So they attend all the classes, they do their homework, they read everything, they're used to do that. So they don't have any trouble with the freedom whether you should come or not come to the lessons. The struggle they have is probably the language. Because for media information and communications you really need to speak Dutch and you need to be able to write it as well. But usually German students take a lot of effort to learn the language well. And they do.