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ARCHIVE:: APRIL 2002
:: ON CAMPUS
The
Complete College Experience
Focus on Opportunities
to Learn Outside the Classroom
By
Harlan Cohen
Special to The Wall Street Journal
Prom is almost
here! But this column isn't about prom. I was just trying to get
your attention. This is about college -- again.
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On
Campus
Harlan Cohen
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College is not
just four more years of school or job training. It's a collection
of experiences that will create lasting memories and help define
who you are. So when you're making decisions about college, choosing
an environment that offers opportunities outside the classroom is
just as important as choosing your courses or your major. It might
even be more important.
Consider this:
There are 168 hours in the week. Approximately 20 of these hours
will be spent inside the classroom (assuming you go to class). This
leaves 148 hours to work, study, sleep, bathe, eat and do whatever
else you want. For me, the challenges, the disappointments and the
victories outside the classroom are the memories that endure. High
school prepared me for life inside the college classroom, but it
was life outside the classroom that prepared me for real life.
The problem
I've encountered is that barely anyone talks to high-school students
about life outside the classroom. It's always about getting into
college, making the grades or picking a major. But there's a whole
other world once you get there, one that is far too important to
overlook.
I asked college
students, past and present, to share some of the out-of-classroom
experiences that shaped their future. I hope it gives you something
to think about this spring and beyond.
The Vibe
This past year, I've visited over 30 colleges, and each one has
a distinct "vibe." It's like a body odor, but without
the smell. The vibe is the pace of life, the political views, the
way people dress, the way people talk, and the general attitude.
And it's almost always found outside the classroom.
"Ultimately,
the thing that helped me was getting the general attitude of the
school," says Adam Rehmer, now a senior at Augustana College
in Rock Island, Ill., who recommends spending at least one night
on campus before you choose a college. He gauged this by "asking
the people at the college challenging questions and going in with
an aggressive attitude." Mr. Rehmer's day of soaking in the
vibe helped him decide on the smaller Augustana over a much larger
university.
The more comfortable
you are with the vibe, the easier it is to explore and take risks
with the rest of your time on campus. Mr. Rehmer lived in the dorms
for two years, then moved to a fraternity and has become extremely
active both on campus and in the community. Things he never intended
to learn: Dorm life helped him manage his personal relationships.
Fraternity life helped him to understand how to manage an organization/business.
Campus activities helped him budget his time efficiently and connect
with people. It was all part of his college education.
Living It Up
Mr. Rehmer's experience illustrates how much you can learn without
even going to class. Consider your residence halls, for instance.
Not all residence
halls are the same (or smell the same). Some are big and some are
small. Some cater to upperclassmen and some to freshmen and sophomores.
Some are co-ed, or have co-ed floors (sorry, there are no co-ed
rooms). Some are "residential colleges," where you live
among people with similar interests. Each of these environments
offers a different experience, yet any one of them will help broaden
your education.
It's an experience
that many commuter students miss out on, says Nic Heinrich, who
started out college living at home. "I spent two years commuting,
and I never really felt like I was part of the college," he
says. "I made friends only with those I knew from class, and
anything outside of class I never participated in, because I wasn't
there or didn't know about the events."
So he transferred,
and he's now an upperclassman at University of Wisconsin-Platteville.
"I needed to live in the dorms," Mr. Heinrich says. "Though
I was uneasy at first, I can still say to this day that dorm life
was the greatest experience in college. I made an entire social
network of people, some who are my best friends today."
Getting
Out There
And don't forget that there is a world outside the classroom and
the dorm. Much of your college education will come from the resources
and diversions you have access to off campus, in the surrounding
town or a nearby city. A campus in rural America offers a whole
different set of experiences from a big-city campus, though both
can be equally enlightening.
Alexis Abrams
started her undergrad at a small college in rural Ohio, but after
two years, felt she needed more variety. So she transferred to Columbia
University's Barnard College in New York. In her free time, she
got involved in the International Center of Photography there, and
eventually she became a docent, or outside lecturer. So where is
she now? Back in the heartland, pursuing her passion in photojournalism
as a graduate student at the University of Missouri in Columbia.
Every college
offers a unique experience. So how do you know you'll end up at
one that's right for you? It might seem like an overwhelming decision,
but it doesn't have to be.
Just ask yourself
this one question: Can the college I've chosen offer me a comfortable
place where I can take risks, expand my mind and discover my passion,
inside and outside the classroom? That's what a complete college
education is all about.
Send your
comments to harlan@helpmeharlan.com
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