Advice for Undergrads
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JWD
United States12607 Posts
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bludragen88
United States527 Posts
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ilovehnk
475 Posts
if you want to be successful, time manage, choose 2 of varsity, academics and social. you can't do all 3. study on regular basis, never study the day before tests, final. | ||
LuMiX
China5757 Posts
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DreaM)XeRO
Korea (South)4667 Posts
Eat well...Or at least dont order out ALL the time. Learn how to cook | ||
ieatkids5
United States4628 Posts
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Hot_Bid
Braavos36362 Posts
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Chef
10810 Posts
If I have one piece of advice for new university students: Don't drink and party during midterms, and you'll be fine. There's plenty of time for that on the weekend after, not to mention a semester is only 3 months long + a month of exams... Just grow a brain. I'm not academically very intelligent... I just know how to manage my time and my life. That's the only skill you really need to do well enough in anything. When life sucks, just deal with it and focus on doing what you need to do... Don't suddenly give up and waste all you've built for yourself by overindulging in frivolous pursuits. | ||
reaver_drop
Canada131 Posts
On February 06 2009 04:34 DreaM)XeRO wrote: Dont procrastinate, college work piles up super fast Eat well...Or at least dont order out ALL the time. Learn how to cook Definately learn how to cook, it helps reduce spending money on food by ALOT. Once I learned how my monthly amount on food went from like $800 to $400. After the first semester I learned 1 thing ... stay ahead in work. I'm about a week ahead in each class and that way I have some leeway time in case something comes up and I can't do the work. | ||
Tensai176
Canada2061 Posts
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Scooter
United States747 Posts
On February 06 2009 04:20 bludragen88 wrote: 6) Exercise will give you more energy, not make you tired/sore. quoted for truth for a few months I was sleeping 10/11 hours a day and felt like shit no matter what I did, but after I started working out I was working great again. Also my uni has a crazy gym center that's free for students, so that helped out a bit. | ||
kidd
United States2848 Posts
Pacing yourself through these assignments helps out so much instead of cramming it all into one day. If you have a paper due in a month, start on it early and do little bits each day. Once your first draft is finished, set it down and wait another day to proofread so that you can have some other ideas and thoughts to add. Timing yourself with all your assignments as well as studying will basically make college life cake. Also, I will bold this for for importance: Always check your out your professors on ratemyprofessor.com before entering their class. Trust me on this one! | ||
bludragen88
United States527 Posts
On February 06 2009 04:44 Hot_Bid wrote: i disagree about the high school friends bit, because during and after undergrad, you become the person you really are. in high school you are often still developing your mind and personality, and the friends you make are often regional and clique-based. in college, most people get a full spectrum of people (or at least the opportunity for more diverse friendships) and these people know you as a person who is closer to the person you'll be for the rest of your life. sure there will be the handful of high school friends that you keep in touch with, but its never the same. i find the friends i made during undergrad and after to be those that i'm closest with. i guess its different for each person, depending on their hs/college experience. I agree with this entirely. A lot of people are who their friends want them to be, or who their parents want them to be, or what is easiest based on circumstances while in high school. You'll find so many of your friends that change into people you barely recognize within your first year of college, once they have the freedom to do so. I think you find out who your real friends (out of your high school bunch) definitely aren't pretty quickly... but you only find which people are worthwhile to hang out with/talk with in junior or senior year of university... and you should really stick to those high school friends. Using that rule of thumb I've realized which of my friends in high school were for convenience sake, and which I really do get along with. And that's for your own sake as well as your friend's sake ... not only do they need to get out and experiment to figure out who they really want to be, you need to also in order to find your own niche/place, and you can't do that while trapped in the confines of your past patterns with your old group of friends. And all of the stuff about studying and not procrastinating... everyone knows what you "should do" when it comes to work. Study hard and early, however works best for you (lecture notes, textbook, practice questions, practice exams)... sleep well and in a regular pattern... blah blah blah. What it really comes down to is this: If you learn the material because you're interested in it and want to learn it well/get something out of it, you can get a lot out of whatever class you take, and you'll do well in the class - even without cramming the day before the final. The difference between really caring and not caring can make up for a huge number of hours of repetitive practice problems or reading the book late into the morning before a test, because all the connections in the material will start to form. If you don't believe me, try it - or pm me and I'll explain further. | ||
b3tty
Canada216 Posts
On February 06 2009 05:15 kidd wrote: Also, I will bold this for for importance: Always check your out your professors on ratemyprofessor.com before entering their class. Trust me on this one! always do this. if you can't switch out of a class with a bad prof, look for what times the other sections of the course is being taught and sit in on those lectures. | ||
omninmo
2349 Posts
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EvoChamber
France2505 Posts
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passby20
United States47 Posts
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OneOther
United States10774 Posts
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SpiritoftheTunA
United States20903 Posts
i'll be sure to take 1 and 2 to heart this fall i think i'm pretty good at 3 4 and 5 already though | ||
KOFgokuon
United States14886 Posts
On February 06 2009 04:44 Hot_Bid wrote: i disagree about the high school friends bit, because during and after undergrad, you become the person you really are. in high school you are often still developing your mind and personality, and the friends you make are often regional and clique-based. in college, most people get a full spectrum of people (or at least the opportunity for more diverse friendships) and these people know you as a person who is closer to the person you'll be for the rest of your life. sure there will be the handful of high school friends that you keep in touch with, but its never the same. i find the friends i made during undergrad and after to be those that i'm closest with. i guess its different for each person, depending on their hs/college experience. word i only talk to 1 kid from high school, but I still talk to 4-5 of my friends from outside of school because i never felt like I had to change who i was to fit in with them, I could always just be myself | ||
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