When I was in first grade, I went to school in Hangzhou International School. The classes ranged from preschool to twelfth grade, totaling to about 312 students. At least, that’s the only number
I remember.
HIS is a small private
school with students from Japan, Korea, Germany, Australia, you name it. It was a day school, ending at 3, and uniforms were required. Nobody got dress-coded, and each class became very, very tight.
One of my most vivid memories is walking down a long, white hallway decorated with life-sized paintings of dinosaurs. It was an empty hallway with big windows
and no doors, so we could be as loud as we wanted. And with 25+ students in my grade, we were definitely loud. We travelled from class to class as a pack, because in lower and middle school, that’s how classes worked.

I was at HIS for 8 years. Leaving China to go to Ojai Valley School was probably the biggest change in my life.
There’s only 114 students at OVS. At least, that’s the only number
I remember. We have a dress code and students that ran around campus in all different directions to different classes.
It’s wide, crazy, open
, and very, very, very small. You’re basically forced to get to know the people here because we’re kinda-sorta stuck on top of a hill together.
The two college dorms I applied
to, Skarland and Moore, with 100 and 322 students living in them. Which are the sizes of the only schools I have ever been to. I guess you can consider me a small-town girl.
It was a small world for me. This school, with about 9,000 students, is going to be an entirely new galaxy for me.






