ārrela ʻun i beti waita koketheriai manifestua i mana koo kambis planes ni omoko mell걸o kotouu syatura. Shiff lu, pār dingесon喜欢 We all know them, they know us. I'm surprised when I walk in the office and they call me by name because I think there must be so many other students but they know us all individually and they're there to help. There were mentoring sessions as well where the year ahead of us would help us with any assignments that were coming up. Tutorials are quite intimate so we actually get quite involved with what we're doing. It's interactive. Our cohort was very supportive of each other to this day. We still have our Facebook page where we contact each other and ask each other questions about anything in regards to teaching. When I finish my lectures, I'm pretty much straight away driving across town to go get my kids which makes this campus so convenient. It takes me about ten minutes. My routine when I get home is pretty much my kids. It's getting them ready, getting their homework done, giving them dinner. If it's a nice day and we have a bit of time, I might take you to the playground. My study itself doesn't really start until they go to bed. Down a normal week, I might stay up to about ten or eleven o'clock at night just getting in a few readings and what they need to do. When I was on my first youth camp, we all had to sit around in a circle and tell everybody what we wanted to be when we grow up. We all went around and they were saying, you know, I want to be a doctor, I want to be a lawyer and it got to me and I said I wanted to be a teacher and all the girls laughed and then it wasn't until I had kids that I realised actually I don't care. I do want to be a teacher so it's taken me a good ten, fifteen years to really decide but this is what I want to do so this is why I'm here now.