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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
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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.