|
|
Sign up for
more great advice on: |
| | |
|
| | |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
GIVE IT A CHANCE. When my parents moved me to college,
the dorm didn't have elevators, so they helped me carry my stuff up four floors.
After that, we went back to the hotel where they were staying and I burst into tears.
I said, "Please take me with you. I want to go home. I'll go to school there."
My dad looked at me and said, "I would take you, but I just moved all of your stuff up four flights of stairs.
Stay a semester and then see what you think." That was great advice.
Eventually, you get involved and make many new friends.
-- ERIN
CENTRAL BIBLE COLLEGE
I HAD A REALLY GOOD TIME after I committed myself.
I think it's all a matter of making the decision that you want to be there and you want to be
doing what you're doing. People spent a lot of time choosing the college they want to go to.
It makes a big difference if you're excited about where you end up.
-- ANNE
GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
|
|
|
A good article about common freshman-year worries (You're not alone!):
Overcoming Your Freshman Fears (MSN encarta)
And send this link to your parents:
www.greatschools.net/cgi-bin/showarticle/670
|
|
|
- If you and your parents disagree, keep the temperature down by explaining your point of view.
Use the "I"-statement method: "I think I should be responsible for my own academic progress,
and for choosing to share that information with you." Try that, instead of "You're wrong.
I'm not going to do it." That's so high school.
- Give your parents a big present -
sign them up for your college's newsletters, magazines, newspapers; whatever is for alumni, parents, and friends of the school.
They'll feel connected to your college experience without having to depend on you for it.
And they'll think you're very sweet and considerate, too.
|
|
Remember:
To make sure you continue to receive
Heads Up! Survive Freshman
Year e-mails in your inbox (and
that they aren't sent to junk folders), please add
college@hundredsofheads.com
to your address
book.
| |
| |