 Really colourful, just really colourful. Energetic. It's hard to say. Vibrant. Life changing. I just say life you know. Unexpected. Inspirational. So as in one word, enigmatic. The economics degree here was very different to the other unis. This heterodox approach is very appealing to me because you're not just studying the mainstream, you're criticising a lot, learning, trying to do different things. One of my modules was Development of Economics of Africa. I mean that's something you won't get elsewhere, the specialisation and how you're so concentrated in different areas of the world. I'm Caribbean so I'm from Jamaica and I like the fact that I could do such a traditional degree but I could incorporate that with development studies and that main thing attracted me to so has. I've still done all the same courses that all the mainstream universities do but it's been absolutely the most best experience ever. Studying economics, it's a lot different from other universities. They don't focus on one, they do all types of different economics, not like in a single UCL. It's quite unique, it's us. So I said the only place that does headstock economics so it was really nice to get a player or something else so not what I did at A-levels, not what all my friends at the LSE and UCL are doing. The professors here are so, they're really nice and they come from very backgrounds, they've done so much, they've experienced so much. You get a very open-minded, very, I think, depth exposure to everything that you want. You get a whole different range of people from here, from different places and everyone's friendly and that's what I came to find here and everyone wants to help each other and excel and I've excelled too with my degree here. My favorite thing was the diversity of ideas. It's the freedom to choose, the freedom to think whatever you want to think, to think outside of the mainstream, economics, mainstream politics, bring your own ideas in to critique and to ask questions from the bigger institutions.