
- Come to class and pay attention. This one should be a
no-brainer. If you must miss class, e-mail your professor in advance and
explain your situation. And when you’re in class, be visibly attentive;
let your professor know you’re in the room.
- Learn to balance
your studies and your job. Your job is not an end in itself but a means
for you to go to university. To confuse those priorities is to defeat
the very purpose of being here.
- Be prepared in advance for all
of your assignments. This is called “studying.” Get used to doing it;
it will be your primary activity for the next four years.
- Read
sitting up (not in bed), with a pencil to mark up the text. A clean text
is an unread one. And whenever the professor reads a passage out loud,
mark it if you haven’t done so already. It may be on the next test.
- Find
a quiet, regular place to study. This is your special sanctum, for that
purpose only. Don’t eat, listen to music, or entertain your friends
there.
- Study in sessions of no more than an hour, then take a
break. Three sessions of fifty minutes each week is better than three
hours at one sitting. A general rule is two hours of study time for each
hour of class.
- Finish your papers several days early so you’ll
have time to revise them. Go to the Writing Center if you need help.
Read your paper out loud to a friend; you‘ll be surprised how many
mistakes you catch.
- Know your professors’ office hours and take
advantage of them. Talk to these people. They have an interest in
helping you succeed--and get lonely during their office hours if no one
comes.
- Go regularly to the library; knowledge is in books, not
on Wikipedia. Consider your college education a bibliography for the
rest of your life.
- Find an appropriate social outlet. The best
students are well-rounded. A social outlet is not, however, a wild night
on the town. Join campus organizations or watch free on-campus movies.
Check the school newspaper for events happening both on campus and in
the community.
- Begin studying for an exam a week early. And
learn proper test-taking skills, e.g.: write identifications in complete
sentences; make sure your essays have thesis and topic sentences; if
you have a choice of topics, choose the one(s) that will show the
breadth (not just depth) of your knowledge; and proofread your exam
papers before submitting them.
Enjoy yourself. This should be, literally, the time of your life.
https://www.usm.edu/
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