describe yourself in one sentence.

<p>these are all great ideas, I might use them all in one huge sentence.</p>

<p>I was going to start another thread but I though that, since this is slready about yearbook interviews, I should just put it here.</p>

<p>I’m supposed to interview an Argentinian exchange student, but so far all I could come up with was:</p>

<p>How do you find the food different here?
What’s the best place you’ve visitied here?
How does education differ here than from your country?
Has your stay taught you the native language (or just phrases)?
… and a few more I can’t remember…</p>

<p>any ideas?</p>

<p>A couple for you…</p>

<p>“what was one thing you were not prepared for coming here?”
“what was your biggest suprise here?”
“what is something you think other people should know about where you came from?”
“most important thing you’ve learned here?”
“how did your first impressions change as you’ve been here?”</p>

<p>Would you recommend the exchange program to your Argentinian classmates?</p>

<p>^ that one was okay, but I think I have like 5 questions that ask the same thing but were worded differently.</p>

<p>what about this one:
people who have difficulty communicating verbally usually use signs or gestures to communicate. Have you learned any hand gestures or commonly used movements since your stay here?</p>

<p>^was that too boring?</p>

<p>I rock my own world.</p>

<p>I wouldn’t want to be heard saying that. but that’s me. :]</p>

<p>I am someone who thinks outside the round square.</p>

<p>does that even make sense. am i missing something?</p>

<p>Smarter than all of you!</p>

<p>if i said that, my grades contadict that statement.</p>

<p>sarcasm is a virtue. </p>

<p>ps. you should learn that stuck-on-1900</p>

<p>I’m not stuck on it. I just got it in November.</p>