What's Inside
Tutoring Schedules
|
Transition from High School to College
| FOLLOWING
THE RULES IN HIGH SCHOOL |
CHOOSING RESPONSIBLY IN COLLEGE |
| * High school is mandatory and
usually free. |
* College is voluntary and expensive. |
| * Your time is structured by others. |
* You manage your own time. |
| * You need permission to participate
in extracurricular activities |
* You must decide whether to participate
in co-curricular activities. |
| * You can count on parents and teachers
to remind you of your responsibilities and to guide you in setting
priorities. |
* You must balance your responsibilities
and set priorities. You will face moral and ethical decisions you
have never faced before. |
| * Each day you proceed from one class
directly to another, spending 6 hours each day--30 hours a week--in
class. |
* You often have hours between classes;
class times vary throughout the day and evening and you spend only
12 to 16 hours each week in class |
| * Most of your classes are arranged for
you. |
* You arrange your own schedule in consultation
with your adviser. Schedules tend to look lighter than they really
are. |
| * You are not responsible for knowing
what it takes to graduate. |
* Graduation requirements are complex,
and differ from year to year. You are expected to know those that
apply to you. |
| * Guiding principle: You will usually
be told what to do and corrected if your behavior is out of line. |
* Guiding principle: You're are expected
to take responsibility for what you do and don't do, as well as for
the consequences of your decisions. |
| GOING
TO HIGH SCHOOL CLASSES |
SUCCEEDING IN COLLEGE CLASSES |
| * The school year is 36 weeks long; some
classes extend over both semesters and some don't. |
* The academic year is divided into two
separate 15-week semesters, plus a week after each semester for exams. |
| * Classes generally have no more than
35 students. |
* Classes may number 100 students or
more. |
| * You do most of your studying in class,
with homework as a back-up. |
* You do most of your studying outside
of class (at least 2 to 3 hours outside of class for each hour in
class) with lectures and other class work as a guide. |
| * You seldom need to read anything more
than once, and sometimes listening in class is enough. |
* You need to review class notes and
text material regularly. |
| * You are provided with textbooks at
no expense. |
* You need to budget substantial funds
for textbooks, which will usually cost more than $300 each semester.
Textbooks must be bought promptly (before the bookstore returns unpurchased
copies). |
| * You are expected to read short assignments
that are then discussed, and often re-taught, in class. |
* You are assigned substantial amounts
of reading and writing which may not be directly addressed in class. |
| * Guiding principle: You will usually
be told in class what you need to learn from assigned readings. |
* Guiding principle: It's up to you
to read and understand the assigned material; lectures and assignments
proceed from the assumption that you've already done so. |
| HIGH
SCHOOL TEACHERS |
COLLEGE PROFESSORS |
| * Teachers check your completed homework. |
* Professors may not always check completed
homework, but they will assume you can perform the same tasks on tests. |
| * Teachers remind you of your incomplete
work. |
* Professors may not remind you of incomplete
work. |
| * Teachers approach you if they believe
you need assistance. |
* Professors are usually open and helpful,
but most expect you to initiate contact if you need assistance. |
| * Teachers are often available for conversation
before, during, or after class. |
* Professors expect and want you to attend
their scheduled office hours. |
| * Teachers have been trained in teaching
methods to assist in imparting knowledge to students. |
* Professors have been trained as experts
in their particular areas of research. |
| * Teachers provide you with information
you missed when you were absent. |
* Professors expect you to get from classmates
any notes from classes you missed. |
| * Teachers present material to help you
understand the material in the textbook. |
* Professors may not follow the textbook.
Instead, to amplify the text, they may give illustrations, provide
background information, or discuss research about the topic you are
studying. Or they may expect youto relate the classes to the
textbook readings. |
| * Teachers often write information on
the board to be copied in your notes. |
* Professors may lecture nonstop, expecting
you to identify the important points in your notes. When professors
write on the board, it may be to amplify the lecture, not to summarize
it. Good notes are a must. |
| * Teachers impart knowledge and facts,
sometimes drawing direct connections and leading you through the thinking
process. |
* Professors expect you to think about
and synthesize seemingly unrelated topics. |
| * Teachers often take time to remind
you of assignments and due dates. |
* Professors expect you to read, save,
and consult the course syllabus (outline); the syllabus spells out
exactly what is expected of you, when it is due, and how you will
be graded. |
| * Teachers carefully monitor class attendance. |
* Professors may not formally take roll,
but they are still likely to know whether or not you attended. |
| * Guiding principle: Teachers bear
much of the responsibility for your learning. |
* Guiding principle: You bear the
responsibility for your learning while your professors serve as guides,
mentors, and resources. |
| TESTS
IN HIGH SCHOOL |
TESTS IN COLLEGE |
| * Testing is frequent and covers small
amounts of material. |
* Testing is usually infrequent and may
be cumulative, covering large amounts of material. You, not the professor,
need to organize the material to prepare for the test. A particular
course may have only 2 or 3 tests in a semester. |
| * Makeup tests are often available. |
* Makeup tests are seldom an option;
if they are, you need to request them. |
| * Teachers frequently rearrange test
dates to avoid conflict with school events. |
* Professors in different courses usually
schedule tests without regard to the demands of other courses or outside
activities. |
| * Teachers frequently conduct review
sessions, pointing out the most important concepts. |
* Professors rarely offer review sessions,
and when they do, they expect you to be an active participant, one
who comes prepared with questions. |
| * Guiding principle: Mastery is usually
seen as the ability to reproduce what you were taught in the form
in which it was presented to you, or to solve the kinds of problems
you were shown how to solve. |
* Guiding principle: Mastery is often
seen as the ability to apply what you've learned to new situations
or to solve new kinds of problems. |
| |
GRADES IN COLLEGE |
| * Grades are given for most assigned
work. |
* Grades may not be provided for all
assigned work. |
| * Consistently good homework grades may
raise your overall grade when test grades are low. |
* Grades on tests and major papers usually
provide most of the course grade. |
| * Extra credit projects are often available
to help you raise your grade. |
* Extra credit projects cannot, generally
speaking, be used to raise a grade in a college course. |
| * Initial test grades, especially when
they are low, may not have an adverse effect on your final grade. |
* Watch out for your first tests.
These are usually "wake-up calls" to let you know what is expected--but
they also may account for a substantial part of your course grade.
You may be shocked when you get your grades. |
| * You may graduate as long as you have
passed all required courses with a grade of D or higher. |
* You may graduate only if your average
in classes meets the departmental standard--typically a 2.0 or C. |
| * Guiding principle: "Effort counts."
Courses are usually structured to reward a "good-faith effort." |
* Guiding principle: "Results count."
Though "good-faith effort" is important in regard to the professor's
willingness to help you achieve good results, it will not substitute
for results in the grading process. |
The information on this page is adapted
from and courtesy of:
Altshuler Learning Enhancement Center at Southern Methodist University
Gary Schultz Director of Web
Communications
Perkins Administration Building, 6425 Boaz Lane, Dallas, TX 75205
Copyright © 2002 All rights reserved.
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