| ARCHIVE
:: MARCH 2003 :: ON CAMPUS
Academic
Freedom
In College, No One's Forcing You to Study and Go to Class. But You
Should Anyway.
BY HARLAN
COHEN
SPECIAL TO THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Beep
beep
beep
beep
It's 6:38.
The
alarm is going off. You can either get up for your 7:30 a.m. class
or sleep through it. Easy choice. You switch off the alarm, roll
over and decide to wake up just in time for lunch and your 1:30
p.m. class. It meets three times a week and you already missed it
twice last week. Lunch runs long and you arrive late, but no one
in the 150-seat lecture hall notices. You find a seat in the back
and settle in. The first of four exams is weeks away, so you decide
not to take notes today. Soon you let your eyelids drop for a short
nap. Once class ends, it's back to the dorms to hang out with friends
and stay up all night again. Then it's the same thing tomorrow.
The
best part: Your parents don't know what you're doing and your professors
won't know you well enough to care.
Welcome
to college, where you're finally free to live the life you want,
with no one around to bother you.
And
enjoy it while it lasts. Because it will probably be the shortest
college career of your life.
College
gives you academic freedom of choice that you've likely never experienced
before. Over the course of four years, you'll get to choose your
major, choose your electives and, yes, choose whether or not to
go to class.
But
the choices have consequences. If you do skip too many classes and
blow off studying, you'll get failing grades and get kicked off
campus. And then you'll be back home, with your parents waking you
up again.
Set
a Routine
One
big difference you'll notice about college is the structure-or,
I should say, lack of structure. In high school, you've got a set
schedule. You're up early and expected to stay in school all day,
with teachers checking attendance in each class. If you stray from
the schedule, you have to account for the lost time somehow, with
a late pass or an absentee note.
College
isn't like that. On a typical day, you might have as many as five
classes or none at all, depending on how you schedule them. These
classes meet at various times of day and in different buildings,
often leaving you with odd blocks of time to kill. That's good,
because you're free to use this time as you please, with no one
checking on you. But it's bad, because with no one checking on you,
it's easy to get lazy.
That's
why it's so important to create a routine for yourself. Jennifer
Reynick learned this the hard way during her freshman year at the
University of Washington in Seattle. A straight-A student in high
school, Jennifer assumed she could pull the same grades in college
without much effort. But since she didn't budget time to study,
she quickly found herself falling behind.
For
the first time in her academic career, her grades plummeted. "When
I went to high school, I didn't really study or work," says
Jennifer, now a senior. "But here, you have to work."
Jennifer
set out to put some structure back in her life. She now leaves for
class in the morning and stays on campus all day. In between classes,
she reads and studies. She treats college like a full-time job:
Her days are devoted to academics, and her nights belong to her.
As a result, she's back on top of her grades. Still, her GPA reflects
the remnants of her floundering freshman year.
Stick
With It
Once
you've got your routine, you have to stick with it. You must get
yourself up, get yourself motivated, and get yourself to class.
Granted, it's not always easy to get motivated for a 7:30 a.m. class
after a late night out with friends, especially if the professor
doesn't take attendance. Even if he or she does, it's not like anyone
is going to call home if you miss class, right?
So
where do you find the motivation? In yourself. UW Freshman Tara
Gates missed a lot of her classes the first quarter. "It's
not like I have to go," she would tell herself. "Besides,
I'm tired." (She had NEVER skipped a day of class in high school.)
While
her professors weren't taking attendance, they were teaching things
that Tara needed to know. Tara didn't realize that professors design
exams based on their lectures, not just textbooks. In a college
lecture, the teacher stands in the front of the classroom and reviews
readings and materials. If you miss a lecture, you miss what's on
the exams, and your grades suffer.
After
a quick visit home with her parents for the holidays, Ms. Gates
returned to campus reinvigorated. This quarter, she goes to all
her classes. "I haven't missed one yet," she boasts. As
a result, her grades have rebounded.
Get
Help
So
you've been to all the classes and read all the books. But you still
don't get the material. Now what do you do?
Another
big difference between high school and college is that you are the
one who has to seek out help. "In high school, teachers are
pushing you, but in college you have to push yourself," says
UW freshman Matthew Schneider. And there is plenty of help available.
Every
college professor has office hours. These are blocks of time professors
set aside to meet students in their offices and offer help. Office
hours are also a great way to allow your teacher to get to know
you personally. In addition, there are usually teaching assistants
(graduate students in the same department) who are available to
help undergraduates. A lot of campuses even have free tutoring.
If you need help, all you have to do is ask.
For
Matthew, it made all the difference. "In Philosophy 160, I
understood most of it, but a few paragraphs confused me," he
says. "There were about 200 people in the class. I went to
the professor's office hours. He was in the room with a dog at his
feet. I thought that was kind of interesting. He read the paragraph
to me and broke it down." Matthew got the help he needed, and
an A.
As
you progress throughout your college career, the classes will get
smaller, professors will get to know you better, and you will be
motivated because you want to work and succeed. But the first year
can be tough. That's when it's easiest to slip academically, because
it's the most confusing and unsettling. It's a combination of new
routines, new classes, new teachers, a new home, new schedules and
a new life. But try not to let it throw you.
When
it comes to making the grade in college, choose to go to classes,
choose to do your work, and choose to push yourself to get help.
If you get in the habit of making the right choices from the start,
not only can you graduate with honors, you'll set a path for success
that goes far beyond the classroom.
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