Die katalanische Hauptstadt Barcelona gehört zu den schönsten Städten Europas. Direkt am Mittelmeer gelegen bietet sie ein großartiges kulturelles Angebot, architektonische Meisterwerke und ein angenehmes Klima.
Barcelona ist eine Stadt in der Schwebe zwischen Tradition und Moderne. Kleine, verwinkelte Gassen und beeindruckende Boulevards, elegante Gebäude in historischen Vierteln. Die schönen Strände der Stadt sind nur 15 Minuten vom Stadtzentrum entfernt.
Im Zentrum kann man entspannt den Abend ausklingen lassen, am besten mit leckeren Tapas. Die Nacht wird in Barcelona oft zum Tag gemacht. Mehr als 500 Kneipen, Bars, Jazz- und Flamenco-Bühnen, Diskos und Musikbars laden zum Besuch ein.
Barcelona, auch „Rose des Feuers“ genannt ist seit jeher Anziehungspunkt für Freidenker. Antoni Gaudí, Pablo Picasso und Miró lebten ihre Kunst und Architektur in Barcelona aus. Die Zeugnisse ihres Schaffens finden sich im Stadtbild und den Museen der Stadt.
Dank seines mediterranen Klimas sind die Temperaturen in Barcelona zu jeder Jahreszeit angenehm. Neben Spanisch wird in Barcelona auch Katalán gesprochen, ein typisch spanisches Phänomen, welches in den culture lessons des Praktikumsprogramms Reisejournalismus in Barcelona besonders thematisiert wird.
Tolle Nachricht also für junge Leute mit reisejournalistischem Interesse und für Fans der katalanischen Hauptstadt Barcelona: das Projekt Reisejournalismus in Barcelona findet auch Juli/August 2013 in der spanischen Metropole statt.
Das Projekt ist für Studenten und junge Berufstätige mit starkem reise-journalistischem Interesse gedacht und gibt diesen die Möglichkeit, während eines drei- bis vierwöchigen Aufenthalts in Barcelona ein professionelles Reisemagazin zu produzieren. Ihnen zur Seite stehen erfahrene Journalisten, Layouter und Koordinatoren aus Barcelona, die ihnen die notwendigen Grundlagen in Workshops vermitteln.
Die Praktikanten in Barcelona recherchieren, führen Interviews, machen Fotos, arbeiten am Design und Layout, schreiben Artikel, besuchen projektrelevante Einrichtungen und nehmen an projektbezogenen Exkursionen teil. Sie werden von lokalen Journalisten, Layoutern und Projektmanagern aus Barcelona inhaltlich betreut.
Mit Zeugnis und unter Anleitung professionell veröffentlichter Arbeit lässt sich dann die weitere Karriere in den kreativen Industrien planen.
Wir freuen uns auf Curso Reisejournalismus in Barcelona 2013. Weitere Informationen zu unseren Praktikumsprogrammen in Barcelona, Madrid, Edinburgh, Berlin und Lyon finden Sie auf unserer Webseite curso24.de.
Redaktion Curso24
Curso führt reise-journalistische Projekte in Edinburgh, Madrid und Berlin durch. Während ihres Aufenthaltes schreiben und layouten die Teilnehmer unter Anleitung von Journalisten, Layoutern und Projektmanagern aus Edinburgh, Madrid und Berlin ein Stadtmagazin, verbessern ihre Fremdsprachenkenntnisse und üben sich in interkultureller Kommunikation.
Posts mit dem Label gap werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label gap werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Sonntag, 13. Januar 2013
Praktikum Reisejournalismus Barcelona
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Dienstag, 10. Juli 2012
Top Tips Madrid
As Madrid is a city which attracts thousands of tourists throughout the whole year, a few useful
tips will be really helpful - especially for those who are visiting the Spanish capital for the first
time. There are hundreds of things to say about the Spanish culture which can be found in Madrid. However, the following are the most essential tips and distinctive features of Spanish people that might catch your attention. These are often very different from the habits of tourists, and therefore they will be useful to know in advance.
Whilst many cultures queue and wait to be acknowledged, forming a proper queue is quite
unusual in Spain. In fact, Spanish people tend to mass together and therefore jump the
queue. This happens in shops, bars, bus and train stops, and all public buildings where a lot
of people tend to gather together with no particular order, and those who are in more of a
hurry or simply louder get served first. Unlike people belonging to many other cultures who
will stand in a queue, quietly and patiently, in Spain they will strike up a conversation.
Therefore tourists, and in particular those who are more used to forming an orderly queue,
should learn how to play the game and win during their stay in Madrid!
The importance of direct contact is another peculiarity of the Spanish culture, where social
interaction is fundamental. This includes the local habit of introducing yourself and saying
goodbye by kissing on the cheek and very often touching whilst talking as a sign of
approval and establishing friendly contact (i.e. touching you on the shoulder). The atmosphere when you go shopping is of a continuous social network, where people have time for each other and speed does not really matter. So even if Madrid is an extended capital city, here you do not get the impression that people are stressed or in a hurry. Here you can always find some very traditional corner where the common and widely-known Spanish spirit of being friendly and laid back is preserved. As in many other tourist cities, pickpockets are always waiting in ambush. This happens especially in the most crowded and tourist areas of the city such as squares and main streets, as well as on public transport and shopping areas.
Asking Spanish people for directions may be tricky and confusing for tourists, as Spanish people seem to have a different and particular conception of distance! It is very likely that
when you ask local people for directions, you will be told “Est. justo al lado” (“It is just round
the corner”), and after a while you may realise the place is actually far away! Or it could be the
other way round: you might be told a place is too far to walk, when the place was quite close
and definitely walkable!
view sample
CTR Curso eG Travel Writing Team Madrid 2012
tips will be really helpful - especially for those who are visiting the Spanish capital for the first
time. There are hundreds of things to say about the Spanish culture which can be found in Madrid. However, the following are the most essential tips and distinctive features of Spanish people that might catch your attention. These are often very different from the habits of tourists, and therefore they will be useful to know in advance.
Whilst many cultures queue and wait to be acknowledged, forming a proper queue is quite
unusual in Spain. In fact, Spanish people tend to mass together and therefore jump the
queue. This happens in shops, bars, bus and train stops, and all public buildings where a lot
of people tend to gather together with no particular order, and those who are in more of a
hurry or simply louder get served first. Unlike people belonging to many other cultures who
will stand in a queue, quietly and patiently, in Spain they will strike up a conversation.
Therefore tourists, and in particular those who are more used to forming an orderly queue,
should learn how to play the game and win during their stay in Madrid!
The importance of direct contact is another peculiarity of the Spanish culture, where social
interaction is fundamental. This includes the local habit of introducing yourself and saying
goodbye by kissing on the cheek and very often touching whilst talking as a sign of
approval and establishing friendly contact (i.e. touching you on the shoulder). The atmosphere when you go shopping is of a continuous social network, where people have time for each other and speed does not really matter. So even if Madrid is an extended capital city, here you do not get the impression that people are stressed or in a hurry. Here you can always find some very traditional corner where the common and widely-known Spanish spirit of being friendly and laid back is preserved. As in many other tourist cities, pickpockets are always waiting in ambush. This happens especially in the most crowded and tourist areas of the city such as squares and main streets, as well as on public transport and shopping areas.
Asking Spanish people for directions may be tricky and confusing for tourists, as Spanish people seem to have a different and particular conception of distance! It is very likely that
when you ask local people for directions, you will be told “Est. justo al lado” (“It is just round
the corner”), and after a while you may realise the place is actually far away! Or it could be the
other way round: you might be told a place is too far to walk, when the place was quite close
and definitely walkable!
view sample
CTR Curso eG Travel Writing Team Madrid 2012
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