What we learned in our year as international students in Winnipeg - Action News
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ManitobaVideo

What we learned in our year as international students in Winnipeg

Meet four international students wrapping up a year of high school in Winnipeg. From facing their fear of the cold, to apprehensions about speaking English, to fitting in with their peers, find out their biggest lessons. This video was made by Sisler Create filmmaking students in collaboration with CBC's Creator Network.

In a new short film, 4 international students reveal the ups and downs of a year at a Winnipeg high school

What we learned hanging with international students in Winnipeg for a year

55 years ago
What we learned hanging with international students in Winnipeg for a year

WhenTelma Gonzalez Surancame to Winnipeg last year from France, the Grade 11 student looked at the move as a test.

"I wanted to challenge my life," said Gonzalez Suran. "Leave my country and do something crazy."

After spending a year at a high school in Charleswood, making new friends, improving her Englishand living through a chilly Prairie winter,Gonzalez Suran said she discovered even more about herself.

"Before, it was really hard for me to stay alone. For me it was, 'I want to be with my friends, be with my family.' But now that I'm here, I just like my own person," she said.

That is just one major change in the lives of four international students wrapping up their year in a Winnipeg high school.

Four high school students side shoulder to shoulder in a kitchen, one is male, three are female
International high school students (from left) Davide Todesco, Adla Kyselov, Zora Spitaleri, and Telma Gonzalez Suran tested themselves by leaving their homes in Europe and spending a year as exchange students at a Winnipeg high school. (Submitted by Laura Gross and Izabela Vielfaure)

The four students Gonzalez Suran, DavideTodescoand Zora Spitaleri, both from Italy, andAdlaKyselov from the Czech Republic are also the subject of a new short film.

The short filmis the work of Laura Gross andIzabela Vielfaure,two filmmaking students fromtheCreate programat Sisler High School in Winnipeg, which offers multimedia training and experience.Thefilmmakers worked incollaboration withCBC Manitoba's Creator Networkas part of Project POV: Sisler Create.


Meet the filmmakers

head shot of woman with long dark hair and glasses
Izabela Vielfaure has a background in broadcasting and filmmaking. She loves making short films and audio projects, and working on movie makeup. If she is not with a camera, she is most likely dancing and listening to music. (Carmen Acuna)
A young fair-haired woman smiles at a camera in a black-and-white photo.
Laura Gross has a homeschooling background and loves to be creative. She has been interested in the film industry for a while and has made a few short films, music videos and animations. If you don't find her working on a new idea, you'll find her out walking her dog. (Carmen Acuna)
black and white logo for project POV by CBC
(CBC)

CBC Manitoba's Project POV: SislerCreate is an ongoingstorytelling collaboration that partners filmmaking students with CBC journalists to produce short videos.

During fall 2022, CBC journalists led storytelling and producing workshops over several weeks with filmmaking students at theCreate program at Sisler High School. Since then, the students have produced original videos for CBC Manitoba.

The Sisler Create program focuses on education and career pathways into the creative industries. Students can take courses in animation, film, game design, visual effects, graphic design and interactive digital media.