Oh, my. Here is the evolution of your -- I can't exactly call it "thinking--" your devious and defamatory claims and insinuations. All direct quotes from the last day or so.
1. Knox was a party girl
2. Abandoning university courses; then, decide move to another city without any university-planned study course, starting unrelated attending of a non-university institute by your own choice instead of following academic percourses, is that typical of a honor student?
3. But if you are not studying a university course, you can't be a honor student. Elementary.
4. she chose Perugia also because there was a ‘university’ (the University of Foreigneers) which she could attend without any academic arrangement.
And finally this:
I will give you the benefit of the doubt, sir. In the USA, the study of foreign languages and cultures is an academic discipline. You can major in Italian or French or German just as you can major in civil engineering or biochemistry. These are all academic courses. Is this not the case in Italian universities? Can a citizen of Italy earn a degree (not a language certificate) in German, or in English? If not, I can see why you're confused. My own American-born daughter has a BA in French. She spent part of her junior year in France, learning from native speakers in accredited courses. She then came home and finished her course work and graduated, just as Amanda Knox planned to do.
You've made an assumption that Amanda Knox could not be an honor student because she wasn't really a university student with an academic course of study. She was. You also assumed that she went to Perugia because she wanted to do drugs and have sex, because what else would a party girl have in mind? She went there, in fact, to learn Italian from native-speaking professors, and because she would be earning credit toward a degree at her home university at the same time.
That's the party girl agenda!
This "party girl, non-student, unserious, drifting to Perugia" business is a set of false claims, made by you. Are you interested in knowing if they're true or not?
1. Knox was a party girl
2. Abandoning university courses; then, decide move to another city without any university-planned study course, starting unrelated attending of a non-university institute by your own choice instead of following academic percourses, is that typical of a honor student?
3. But if you are not studying a university course, you can't be a honor student. Elementary.
4. she chose Perugia also because there was a ‘university’ (the University of Foreigneers) which she could attend without any academic arrangement.
And finally this:
The University for Foreigneers may offer certificate for proficiency in Italian language. It may offer study credits valid at other universities, but in an extremely limited set of subjects.
Now it has recently improved and developed also some real academic courses so maybe I should correct myself and say you are right if you say that now it's a university.
However, it mainly functions not as a university - its students are mostly language students not students of its academic courses - and Knox was not attending it as a university, but as a language school. She would be offered language proficiency credits. That she might later use in her study plan at the university of Washington.
But this can hardly be called an academic semester. It's a study for language certificates.
I will give you the benefit of the doubt, sir. In the USA, the study of foreign languages and cultures is an academic discipline. You can major in Italian or French or German just as you can major in civil engineering or biochemistry. These are all academic courses. Is this not the case in Italian universities? Can a citizen of Italy earn a degree (not a language certificate) in German, or in English? If not, I can see why you're confused. My own American-born daughter has a BA in French. She spent part of her junior year in France, learning from native speakers in accredited courses. She then came home and finished her course work and graduated, just as Amanda Knox planned to do.
You've made an assumption that Amanda Knox could not be an honor student because she wasn't really a university student with an academic course of study. She was. You also assumed that she went to Perugia because she wanted to do drugs and have sex, because what else would a party girl have in mind? She went there, in fact, to learn Italian from native-speaking professors, and because she would be earning credit toward a degree at her home university at the same time.
That's the party girl agenda!
you make a claim, you word such claim as if it was a fact, and you have no interesting in knowing if it's true or not.
This "party girl, non-student, unserious, drifting to Perugia" business is a set of false claims, made by you. Are you interested in knowing if they're true or not?