User:DeletedUser
comments? questions? suggestions? Tell or ask me anything to my talk page
<tabs jsId="myTabs" theme="base"> <tab title="Introduction">
{{#babel: en-N | ko-3 }}
Matt Strum | |
Basic Information | |
---|---|
Gender | Male |
Age | 24 |
Blood type | A+ |
Hometown | Anchorage, AK, USA |
Current location | Seoul, South Korea |
Native languages | English |
Education | |
University | University of Utah |
Major | Computer Engineering |
Studying Korean since | October 2005 |
Misc | |
Music | Big Bang, 2NE1, Epik High |
Movies/drama | Soulmate, Classic |
Food | Kimbap and Spicy rice cake |
Hobbies | Programming, photography, ukulele |
Social | |
Homepage | Mstrum.com |
Blog | On My Way To Korea |
Mstrum | |
me2day | Mstrum |
Mstrum | |
YouTube | mattstrum |
MySpace | Mstrum |
Mstrum | |
Cyworld | Mstrum |
화이팅! |
Korean Projects
How, Where and Why I Learned Korean
I have always loved studying languages. I studied French for one year in middle school, German for two years in high school and one year of Chinese (including traditional characters) in university. I had thought I would settle on Chinese, but fate has something different in store for me. Although I am no longer LDS/Mormon, I did serve two years as a full-time volunteer as a missionary. My church told me to learn Korean and teach the Korean people in Vancouver, Canada. I was so surprised, I had thought they would send me to Taiwan because of the recent language study I had taken. Sadly, I couldn't even tell you where Korea was on a map let alone anything about the culture or people. In October 2005, I entered the missionary training center where I studied Korean (along with missionary stuff) everyday for twelve weeks before being sent out on my own. All of my fellow missionaries (except one) were being sent to Korea, so I knew I would have to study extra hard to master the language without being immersed in it.
Once I arrived in Vancouver in January 2006, I finally got to use the Korean I had learned in the classroom. For two years strait, I was constantly street contacting and meeting with Koreans every day. I was always going through whatever study material I could get my hands on. I kept a notepad on me where I would write about ten words to study every day. I immediately fell in love with everything, the culture, the food, and the people. As missionaries we weren't allowed to listen to music or watch TV or movies so I never got to experience Korean dramas or K-pop the whole time (or even anything English). Missionaries are also not allowed to date or be in relationships, so I kept everything professional. Better than anything I can listen to or watch, I was able to build 정 with the wonderful Koreans I met and that was enough.
When I returned home in October 2007, I immediately started to watch some Korean dramas and listen to music which I absolutely loved. I went back to my university in January 2008 and took some extra Korean classes for personal interest. Ever since then I have been continually watching movies and dramas (I have a HUGE collection now) and listening to new music. I'm currently studying at Seoul National University and will be here for all of 2010. My long-term dream is that I can involve Korea in my job in the future.
Hobbies
- Playing the ukulele
- Taking pictures
- Programming (see Hangeul Assistant)
</tab> <tab title="To-do">
To-do List
- Learning Hangeul
- Flesh out the Jamo pages
- Chinese roots
- More roots
- Connect pages to the roots
- Chinese character redirects
- Work on and release another minor version of Hangeul Assistant
- Work on virtual cellphone input method
- Add ALT button method to be able to type english letters
- Learn the MediaWiki extension engine
- Section with songs and vocab lists
</tab> </tabs>