Project – Romanian NextGen TalesMedia channel: STUDENTV
newsletter media project
Romanian NextGen Tales — monthly newsletter for students & young professionals
A curated editorial digest featuring the most relevant stories and resources from the Student WorkPRO platform.
Romanian NextGen Tales is a monthly editorial newsletter developed as part of the Student WorkPRO platform. Its main goal is to offer readers a carefully selected overview
of the most relevant and widely read articles published within the platform.
The newsletter focuses on topics dedicated to students and young professionals, including personal
development, career guidance, study and work opportunities abroad, and emerging trends in education
and professional growth.
The project is managed by a specialized content team responsible for editing, structuring and
visually enhancing the materials included in each edition. Custom illustrations and graphic elements
are created to support the editorial content and strengthen its visual identity.
In addition, the team coordinates email delivery campaigns, manages reader interaction and ensures
that the newsletter consistently reaches its audience in a clear, engaging and professional format.
Romanian NextGen Tales also serves as a community-building tool by encouraging feedback and reader engagement.
Editorial newsletterContent curationStudent WorkPROCareer developmentCommunity building
Live Streaming · STUDENTV
Live Streaming – “Myths about DUO grants and the reality of Romanian students in the Netherlands”
Romanian NextGen Tales · STUDENTV
A live streaming session dedicated to clarifying myths about DUO grants and presenting the lived reality
of Romanian students in the Netherlands, hosted under the Romanian NextGen Tales project.
Life Between Two Worlds – Diaspora and Romanian Identity
Romanian NextGen Tales · STUDENTV
An English editorial article about the identity dilemmas of Romanian students in the diaspora, navigating
between their home country and the realities of the host society.
Community Management – Romanian NextGen Tales – Netherlands
Romanian NextGen Tales · STUDENTV
A structured weekly activity report documenting how the Romanian NextGen Tales – Netherlands community
was managed through messages, polls, Zoom calls and follow-up support.
Live Streaming – “Myths about DUO grants and the reality of Romanian students in the Netherlands”
📰Romanian NextGen Tales · STUDENTV · English editorial article
✍️Author:Tabrea Fabian(freelance journalist for STUDENTV)
📅Published:November 2024
Live Streaming Live title: “Myths about DUO grants and the reality of Romanian students in the Netherlands”
This live streaming session brings together Romanian students and volunteers to discuss real experiences
behind DUO grants, typical myths circulating in the community, and the practical challenges of living
and studying in the Netherlands. The event is part of the Romanian NextGen Tales project and aims to
offer clear, experience-based information for students who are considering or already following an
academic path in the Netherlands.
The format combines presentation segments with open Q&A, encouraging participants to ask direct
questions about bureaucracy, financial expectations, integration, and the emotional side of student life
abroad. The live recording remains available as a reference resource for future students and families
who need a realistic picture of what studying in the Netherlands actually looks like.
Life Between Two Worlds – Diaspora and Romanian Identity
📰Romanian NextGen Tales · STUDENTV · English editorial article
✍️Author:Tabrea Fabian(freelance journalist for STUDENTV)
📅Published:November 2024
Project 1 - Romanian NextGen Tales - STUDENTV
Chosen topic: “Life Between Two Worlds – Diaspora and Romanian Identity”
Article (approx. 850 words): Life Between Two Worlds – Diaspora and Romanian Identity
When you leave Romania, at first it seems like a physical move: a flight, a suitcase, a temporary rental. But very quickly you realize it is more than that. You not only change countries, but you start to feel that you are living between two worlds – the Romania inside you and the country where you are trying to integrate. This is how life in the diaspora begins. A life in which, as a Romanian student abroad, you learn to carry your identity in a fragile balance.
The question of identity
For many young people who leave to study abroad, the first break happens in ordinary moments: when you are in a store and you cannot find a label you understand. When you want to make a Romanian joke and no one laughs. Or when you try to explain to a colleague what “dor” means and there is no exact translation.
Then the question hits you: who am I here? Am I a Romanian living somewhere else? Or am I becoming something else? It is not a simple question, but it is an important one. And every Romanian student in the diaspora has to ask it, at least once.
Adaptation versus assimilation
Many young people are faced with a choice – unconsciously, most of the time: either they adapt to the host country while keeping something from Romania, or they assimilate completely and start to forget who they were.
But the most valuable stories come from those who manage to find a middle path. To be part of the local community, to learn the language, to work legally, to contribute – but also to keep their Romanian name, to speak to their parents in their mother tongue, to eat stuffed cabbage rolls at Christmas and to explain to foreign colleagues what Mărțișor is.
This is life between two worlds: it does not mean confusion, but balance.
Community – a lifeline
A huge role in preserving identity is played by Romanian communities in the diaspora. NGOs, student groups, churches, cultural associations – all offer that feeling of a “temporary home” that makes you feel less lost.
In the Netherlands, Sweden, Belgium or Italy, there are hundreds of local initiatives where young Romanians join forces. They organize events, live streams, podcasts or counseling sessions for newcomers. In these places, Romanian identity is not an obstacle, but a bridge between people.
The fatigue of explaining who you are
Living in the diaspora, you learn to wear your country on your forehead. You automatically become an ambassador of Romania, even if you did not intend to. At university, at work, in your group of friends – you constantly encounter questions and stereotypes: “Oh, Romania… is it safe there?” “Do you really have Dracula?” “How come you speak English so well?”
After a while, you get tired. But at the same time, you learn to answer with pride. Because being Romanian does not only mean coming from a country with problems, but also from a place with warm, talented, resilient people. Being Romanian in the diaspora is a daily effort to rehabilitate the image of a nation. It is no small thing.
Returning – another dilemma
For some, the diaspora is a stage. For others, it becomes permanent. But regardless of the length of stay, returning to Romania is another identity crisis. You return “home,” but something has changed. Maybe you. Maybe the country. Maybe both.
Friends are no longer the same as before, the pace of life seems foreign, and the jokes from abroad are no longer funny. You start to feel... like an expat in your own country. This is how you understand how deep life between two worlds really is. That you no longer fully belong anywhere, but that you can build a “home” wherever you carry your language, your values, and your personal memory.
Conclusion
Being a Romanian student in the diaspora does not only mean studies, scholarships and rent. It is a journey in which you rebuild your identity, learn to navigate between cultures and to live between worlds. But precisely in this double belonging lies our strength: we can be ambassadors of Romania without a tie, without titles, simply through the way we live, work and love beyond the borders.
Community Management – Romanian NextGen Tales – Netherlands
📰Romanian NextGen Tales · STUDENTV · English editorial article
✍️Author:Tabrea Fabian(freelance journalist for STUDENTV)
📅Published:November 2024
Project 1 - Romanian NextGen Tales - STUDENTV
Activity Report – Community Management Period: March 3–9, 2025 Platform: WhatsApp Group & Facebook Page “Romanian NextGen Tales – Netherlands” Responsible student: Ana-Maria D., student in Groningen
Daily activities (chronological)
Monday, March 3 Published welcome message for new members: “Welcome everyone! If you are new in the group, we invite you to write which city you study in and what expectations you have from this project.” Results: 18 responses, 4 new active members
Tuesday, March 4 Published poll on Facebook: “What is the biggest challenge you have faced as a Romanian student in the Netherlands?” Options: Financial problems Language & integration DUO bureaucracy Loneliness Results: 62 votes, 12 comments (including 3 relevant personal stories)
Wednesday, March 5 Organized Zoom meeting for new students (announcement published on WhatsApp + Facebook) “Friday, March 8, 6:00 PM – informal meeting for newly arrived Romanian students in the Netherlands. We talk, laugh and get to know each other! Zoom link in the description.” Results: 21 registered participants
Thursday, March 6 Informative post: “Did you know that you can collaborate as a freelancer with non-profit organizations and still be eligible for DUO support? Here is what the law says (link to the official DUO guide).” Results: 9 shares, 2 questions in comments (answered promptly)
Friday, March 7 Zoom meeting reminder + open questions for the evening session: “What questions would you like to discuss tonight? Write here and we will address them in the call!” Results: 7 questions collected
Saturday, March 8 Zoom call organized: 60 min, 14 active participants Topics discussed: How to apply for DUO How to legally collaborate with NGOs What life is like in the first months in the Netherlands Feedback after the call: “The discussion helped me a lot, I feel calmer now. Thank you so much!” – Andreea, student in The Hague
Sunday, March 9 Follow-up post: “Thank you all for attending the Zoom session! If you couldn’t make it, we’ll be back next week with a session dedicated only to questions about DUO. What would you like us to include?” Results: 3 suggestions already received
Weekly summary statistics
Activity – Result Posts published – 6 Polls organized – 1 Zoom meetings – 1 (60 min, 14 participants) Replies to direct messages – 9 (WhatsApp & Messenger) Total reactions/engagement – 140+ (likes, comments, votes)
Conclusion The student kept the community active through: Active communication initiatives (posts, polls, Zoom) Accurate information about rights and options Support for the integration of new students Prompt and helpful responses in private and public channels
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