text
stringlengths 0
312
|
---|
Completing first test and
|
projects
|
Feeling more
|
confident
|
about abilities
|
Experiencing
|
homesickness or
|
imposter
|
syndrome
|
Earning “lower-than-usual”
|
grades or not meeting
|
personal expectations
|
Dealing with
|
relationship
|
issues
|
Adjusting to the
|
Learning to access
|
Planning for
|
next
|
pace of college
|
resources for support
|
semester and
|
beyond
|
November
|
December
|
Balancing
|
college with
|
other
|
obligations
|
Focusing on
|
finishing strong
|
Staying
|
healthy and
|
reducing
|
stress
|
Handling additional
|
stress of the end of
|
the semester
|
Thinking
|
about majors
|
and degrees
|
Thinking about the
|
break and how to
|
manage changes
|
Table 1.4 While each student’s first semester will differ, you will likely experience some of the following typical college milestones.
|
The first few weeks will be pretty exhilarating. You will meet new people, including classmates, college staff,
|
and professors. You may also be living in a different environment, which may mean that a roommate is
|
another new person to get to know. Overall, you will most likely feel both excited and nervous. You can be
|
assured that even if the beginning of the semester goes smoothly, your classes will get more challenging each
|
week. You will be making friends, learning who in your classes seem to know what is going on, and figuring
|
your way around campus. You may even walk into the wrong building, go to the wrong class, or have trouble
|
finding what you need during this time. But those first-week jitters will end soon. Students who are living away
|
from home for the first time can feel homesick in the first few weeks, and others can feel what is called
|
“imposter syndrome,” which is a fear some students have that they don’t belong in college because they don’t
|
have the necessary skills for success. Those first few weeks sound pretty stressful, but the stress is temporary.
|
After the newness of college wears off, reality will set in. You may find that the courses and assignments do
|
not seem much different than they did in high school (more on that later), but you may be in for a shock when
|
you get your graded tests and papers. Many new college students find that their first grades are lower than
|
they expected. For some students, this may mean they have earned a B when they are used to earning As, but
|
for many students, it means they may experience their first failing or almost-failing grades in college because
|
they have not used active, effective study strategies; instead, they studied how they did in high school, which is
|
often insufficient. This can be a shock if you are not prepared, but it doesn’t have to devastate you if you are
|
willing to use it as a wake-up call to do something different.
|
By the middle of the semester, you’ll likely feel much more confident and a little more relaxed. Your grades are
|
improving because you started going to tutoring and using better study strategies. You are looking ahead,
|
even beyond the first semester, to start planning your courses for the next term. If you are working while in
|
college, you may also find that you have a rhythm down for balancing it all; additionally, your time
|
management skills have likely improved.
|
By the last few weeks of the semester, you will be focused on the increasing importance of your assignments
|
and upcoming finals and trying to figure out how to juggle that with the family obligations of the impending
|
holidays. You may feel a little more pressure to prepare for finals, as this time is often viewed as the most
|
stressful period of the semester. All of this additional workload and need to plan for the next semester can
|
Access for free at openstax.org
|
1.3 • College Culture and Expectations
|
seem overwhelming, but if you plan ahead and use what you learn from this chapter and the rest of the
|
course, you will be able to get through it more easily.
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.