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What do you wish you had known when starting college?
Some of my friends are nervous prefrosh and asked me to make a list of all the things I wish I had known when going to college so I made a list for them. It has stuff like "bring flipflops to wear in the bathrooms," "don't put styrofoam in the microwave," "bring a ton of quarters for laundry," and "this is how you cash a check."
Sadly however I am worried that I am going to not think of an awful lot of things. So if you can think of something that you had to learn the hard way, or you had problems with, or just wish you had known before the problem was sitting right in front of you please post it here so I can be sure my list is as complete as reasonably possible. |
Re: What do you wish you had known when starting college?
I'm not in college yet, but this is important...
Facebook is really addicitive. I have a college account (purdue.edu)...I just can't stay away from it! Really, it's really addictive. |
Re: What do you wish you had known when starting college?
That it wouldn't take me 14 years to finish! :ahh:
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Re: What do you wish you had known when starting college?
What I would be doing 25+ years later (now) so I could have better selected my classes.
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Re: What do you wish you had known when starting college?
communication is key to any relationship, including student / faculty. If you've got something going on, talk about it. Your professors are people too!
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Re: What do you wish you had known when starting college?
You'll get out of college whatever you put into college. Remeber, you're paying for it, so make the best of it.
Get to know your professors. I also have the ultimate list of stuff to bring to college. It was passed down through about 15 people or so, I just typed it up. PM/e-mail me if you want it. |
Re: What do you wish you had known when starting college?
Remember to have fun with it! Don't be afraid to take chances, to be the person that you want to be. This is a new chance, a new start. The people at your college aren't going to know you, they will be just meeting you. Shape the person that you want to be, and become it.
Take some fun classes! Don't overwhelm yourself with all of your tough classes at once. No matter how many times you forget your ATM code (I have the running record of all of my friends for forgetting it 6 times), go to the bank, bring your liscence and they'll give it to you. BEWARE OF CREDIT CARDS! Most people haven't been out on their own before. Most people haven't had credit cards. There's no one there to tell you no. If you want to go to the mall and get 17 Louis Voittan purses, mom isn't going to be in your dorm room when you get back to yell at you to take them back. I have a friend right now who is paying over $300/month just in credit card interest. Don't do that, it's very bad. On the other hand, don't be afraid to spoil yourself sometimes! Some of those things that mom and dad say no to at home (for me, it's my weekly ice cream run to Coldstone), you can have now. Just be sure to use self control. Ratemyprofessor.com is your friend. If you don't see very much in the way of ratings, your school might have its own site. Talk to your RA, see if one exists. This site is your friend and will help you avoid a really bad semester. Get to know your RA, they are older and have been there before. Every college is different, they will be able to tell you the little tricks of survival at yours. And finally, HAVE FUN! This is college, one of the most fun times in your life! Enjoy it, make lots of new friends, and have the time of your life! |
Re: What do you wish you had known when starting college?
I work in a building here at UT called the Student Services Building. There is actually a branch of Students Services that falls under Student Affairs.
Within that are many areas: New Students Services Student Retention Services Students with Disabilities Mental Health & Counseling Financial Aid Legal Services for Students Health Center Dean of Students and many more In the websites of the universities that you choose/select - you will find these services. Use them. Tomorrow I am at an outreach sponsored by Mental Health & Counseling called Stress Fest. We'll have biofeedback, acupuncture, massage chairs, games, a small petting zoo, snow cones, cool music - it is something our students services does to get the word out to college students during finals/crunch time - that you can access help during stress and bad times and help maintain during good. It's here for you. Get connected with what your university can do for you to help make it an incredible journey. Jane |
Re: What do you wish you had known when starting college?
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Re: What do you wish you had known when starting college?
- Learn the words to the fight song, even if you don't like sports.
- Treat it like a job. You go to work everyday. I wish I knew that one. - It's not just a job. Have fun. Try new things. It's not all study. - Do something. SAE car, give campus tours, join an organization on campus. Something. - Eat healthy. Yes - you can have Mt. Dew and pizza EVERY day. But soon you'll hate pizza, and no one wants to hate pizza. - Don't be stupid. I have to remind the students on the robot team every week, so I assume college people need to know that too. - Be yourself - not who you think you should be. College is the perfect time to do this. - Just because you can buy 50 giant pixie stix with your roommates Sam's club membership does not mean you should eat them all at once. Laughing colored sugar out your nose will be your punishment. - Don't call your family on April 1st and tell them you are in jail and you need bail money. They might forget it's April 1st. Especially if you tell them you got caught doing an April fools day prank. Mom's don't like that. - Call home. - Do laundry. At least once a month. Even if the smell doesn't bother you. - Hang out with people from different majors. It's OK. I had more fun with a bunch of music majors... I'm done for now... lots of life lessons from college. |
Re: What do you wish you had known when starting college?
College was the best twenty years of my life.
I started as a dual-enrolled HS student because there was no calculus at my school back in 1975. I have credits from six colleges, all my degrees (BS'83, MS'85, PhD'90) are from Georgia Tech, and I spent four years as an assistant professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of Missouri. I finally left college for the 'real world' in 1995, and thankfully discovered FIRST a year after that. The most important thing I can tell anyone about college is to enjoy it as much as you can and follow your imagination wherever it leads you. If your goal is to be a professional, then your education will never be complete. Keeping your imaginative fire burning should be your top priority. The knowledge and skills you can acquire are (like the money you can earn) just fuel to keep you moving toward the larger goals you set for yourself by constantly exercising your imagination. |
Re: What do you wish you had known when starting college?
Manage your time well & Start your work as soon as you get it. I was lucky enough to go to a high school that overloading you with work so you got used to high work loads. A lot of people on my freshman floor did not have that and goofed around until 9pm the night before it was due, needless to say they didn't sleep those nights.
Know there will be nights that you have all-nighters. If you drink, be smart. Alternate between an alcoholic drink and water. You'll be thankful for it in the morning. Make friends with upperclassman in your major. They'll be able to help you out if you need it, or even borrow books from. First semester, only join one or two clubs at most. Overloading with too many extras might be hard to adjust to college life. Get one credit card through your bank with a small credit limit (~$500.) This teaches you to learn financial responsibility and build credit. Don't use it unless you know you have the money to pay it off though. If the bank keeps increasing your limit, like some banks do, call and have them lower it again. Mix your hard classes with easier ones each semester. Don't be afraid to change your focus in school. If you went in for certain major and discovered it wasn't for you, go to something that will make you happy. I did this in a way. I thought through my work with Robotics I wanted to do design, turns out I didn't really enjoy it; however, manufacturing & materials interested me a lot more. Understand that sometimes people you were really close to in high school aren't that way in college. Take advantage of internships or co-ops. Create a resume your freshman year. Get it critiqued by professionals in your area or your school's career center. It helps to have a baseline to add to once you have more experience. Have a folder/box with all important documents in them - bills, bank statements, passport - in a place where you know you can find them. It helps having them all in one place when you need something. |
Re: What do you wish you had known when starting college?
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Re: What do you wish you had known when starting college?
I laughed at some of those above.
Boring stuff first: Although you have probably heard it before, don't leave your work til 20minutes before its due in ... it is so tempting to do so... Try and be considerate to flatmates/neighbours... loud music is fine, but if they want to go to sleep, turn it down or relocate to someone elses room... Facebook is way too addictive ... as eugenia said. You can sit there and find random stuff out from your friends and it just wastes your day Don't sit around in your room... go to the uni bar (well, probably doesn't apply there) or to the common room... just do something Laundry, do it at least once a week... not because of the smell, but because otherwise you get to the end of the month and everyone is doing huge amounts of washing... and you will be stuck waiting for hours : Best time of the week to do washing : first thing on a weekday... even better is to take a train home , stay at home for weekend with free decent nosh(food), and get your parents to do your washing ;) Quote:
If there is a day to sign up for various activities / societies, sign up to as many as possible. you don't realise how much time you actually get. First week. Go out EVERY NIGHT! Meet people and make friends! everyone is in the same situation. keep this in mind and you shall suceed. Enjoy your freedom from family, but try to pack up neatly before they come to collect you at end of term/year... get aload of the collapsable boxes to take your stuff in, then throw boxes under your bed. Don't forget to pay for any stuff you need to, such as accomadation. you may get fined if you pay late. (like i lost £40 due toforgetting to pay...) |
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