Mel JBB
JBB Webmaster
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- Jan 25, 2003
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The end of summer is approaching and I'm sure many of you will be starting your first year in college. Here's a few tips from my experience to start you off on the right foot:
* Do not register for any classes before 10am. You might be thinking "well in High School I started class at 7:45am...I'm sure I could handle an 8am class in college." Don't do it! There will be too much going on (especially in the dorms) for you to do your homework and be in bed by midnight.
* If you have the choice to live in the dorms or live at home, go live in the dorms! You'll make some amazing friendships along the way. Plus, if you ever need anything in the last minute (like a printer), you can just walk down the hallways and ask.
* Do sports or join a club. All colleges have some sort of intramural sports or PE classes. Definitely be a part of those.
* Do not illegally download music from the dorms. They're watching you. (I got busted 3 times
)
* If you can't figure out what major you want to do, take a quick visit at your campus career center. I recommend taking the Strong Interest Inventory test. They'll help you narrow down your options to majors that suit your personality.
* Your advisor is your best friend. He/she will help you pick the right classes, the right professors and the right schedule to spread out your difficult classes. I was a retard and avoided my advisor...two quarters in a row I took the most difficult classes back to back and my grades suffered.
* Don't fall into the trap of majoring in something you have no passion for. I've seen a lot of friends that majored in something like engineering because it pays well / pleases the parents...and late in their college career, they realized they have no desire to do that for the rest of their lives. They ended up starting over completely.
* Do something fun and PRODUCTIVE on the side. I started JBB for fun and it blossomed into something great. The real life lessons I learned from JBB were 10x much more valuable than anything I learned from any textbook.
* Choose a professor that suits you. The worst thing you can do is take classes taught be crappy professors or professors that don't match your learning style. For example, some professors want you to figure out textbook problems yourself and THEN lecture on it the next day. Other professors will lecture you on the new material FIRST, and THEN assign homework to test you on it.
* How do you find out about professors? Advisors, word of mouth and professor ratings sites.
* Do NOT ditch any of your classes. Missing class means you miss turning in that day's homework assignment and missing the lesson needed to do the next assignment. Also, classes are paid for out of your parents' pocket. If you break it down, each class can easily cost a hundred bucks or more. Ditching class means pissing away your college tuition.
* Do NOT ditch any of your classes. Even if you go there and end up falling asleep halfway through class, you'll at least get a heads up on upcoming quizzes and homework assignments. Professors have the right to modify their syllabus and move test dates...you'll never know about these unless you go to class.
* Do not register for any classes before 10am. You might be thinking "well in High School I started class at 7:45am...I'm sure I could handle an 8am class in college." Don't do it! There will be too much going on (especially in the dorms) for you to do your homework and be in bed by midnight.
* If you have the choice to live in the dorms or live at home, go live in the dorms! You'll make some amazing friendships along the way. Plus, if you ever need anything in the last minute (like a printer), you can just walk down the hallways and ask.
* Do sports or join a club. All colleges have some sort of intramural sports or PE classes. Definitely be a part of those.
* Do not illegally download music from the dorms. They're watching you. (I got busted 3 times

* If you can't figure out what major you want to do, take a quick visit at your campus career center. I recommend taking the Strong Interest Inventory test. They'll help you narrow down your options to majors that suit your personality.
* Your advisor is your best friend. He/she will help you pick the right classes, the right professors and the right schedule to spread out your difficult classes. I was a retard and avoided my advisor...two quarters in a row I took the most difficult classes back to back and my grades suffered.
* Don't fall into the trap of majoring in something you have no passion for. I've seen a lot of friends that majored in something like engineering because it pays well / pleases the parents...and late in their college career, they realized they have no desire to do that for the rest of their lives. They ended up starting over completely.
* Do something fun and PRODUCTIVE on the side. I started JBB for fun and it blossomed into something great. The real life lessons I learned from JBB were 10x much more valuable than anything I learned from any textbook.
* Choose a professor that suits you. The worst thing you can do is take classes taught be crappy professors or professors that don't match your learning style. For example, some professors want you to figure out textbook problems yourself and THEN lecture on it the next day. Other professors will lecture you on the new material FIRST, and THEN assign homework to test you on it.
* How do you find out about professors? Advisors, word of mouth and professor ratings sites.
* Do NOT ditch any of your classes. Missing class means you miss turning in that day's homework assignment and missing the lesson needed to do the next assignment. Also, classes are paid for out of your parents' pocket. If you break it down, each class can easily cost a hundred bucks or more. Ditching class means pissing away your college tuition.
* Do NOT ditch any of your classes. Even if you go there and end up falling asleep halfway through class, you'll at least get a heads up on upcoming quizzes and homework assignments. Professors have the right to modify their syllabus and move test dates...you'll never know about these unless you go to class.