studying

Start Freshman Year Right: How to Have a Great First Semester in College

As an incoming freshman, college can seem foreboding, huge, and scary. It can also seem like a fresh start and a new meaning of the word "freedom." When most freshman actually get to school, they realize that college isn't scary, and they're totally equipped to handle the volume of people there, and for the most part, it's really fun! However, there are still roadblocks once you get to school, which is why we've comprised this list of tips to get you through the sticky social challenges of your first year.

1. Roommates

Whether you love your roommate or hate them, you will, at some point, undoubtedly get into an argument with them. Granted, it probably won't happen until you've been at school for a couple of months and you're finally comfortable with each other, but comfort hanging out turns into comfort with confrontations, too. Even if you're moving in with your best friend, it's hard to live with somebody. You're constantly around them, and sometimes people just need alone time. Luckily, there are tons of ways to combat occasional annoyances with your roommate!

  • Study in the library instead of your room.
  • Put some sort of pretty fabric in a canopy around your bed to create the façade of alone time, even when they're in the room.
  • Talk things out calmly, and hear them out if you're fighting. If it gets bad, turn to your Resident Advisor (RA) to mediate. They're often trained to do so!
  • Try to be respectful of their space.
  • Even if you're in the same group of friends, make friends with lots of people so you're not always together outside of the room, too.

2. Class work

College is fun, but you need to keep in mind the fact that you're not there to party. As much fun as it is to arrive and be swept up in the constant whirlwind of "extracurricular activities," if you flunk your classes you'll have a lot more to worry about than missing out on a night of fun to study. Find the right balance of school and fun by forcing yourself to stay in until you've finished everything that you need to do for school. Don't miss class, either. It's a myth that professors don't care and that you don't need to go to class. Every class contains important material that you will need for your final, even if you don't need it for the paper due in three days.

3. Avoiding the Freshman Fifteen.

The freshman fifteen is not a myth, unfortunately. Combine late nights of studying, unlimited food in the dorms, restaurants around town that are willing to deliver food for almost no money, and (possibly) less exercise, and you get some weight gain. You may not gain 15 pounds, but in my experience, almost everyone I knew gained weight in their first year of college. Here are a few ways to maintain your weight:

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Don't Wait: Where You Will Lose If You Procrastinate

You may remember my rants on the merits of organization and the downfalls of procrastination, but I wasn't the first person to make this recommendation. You have probably heard from one source or another that procrastination will come back and bite you. To be honest it may be true, but for the most part procrastination and college go hand in hand.

Let's face it, college is exciting. A lot is going on and you are going to be forced to push some school work to the last minute possible in order to squeeze in all the other fun activities that are available. And yes, sometimes these fun activities aren't anything special. Sometimes I would find myself lounging in my room with the notebook on the couch next to me, playing the newest videogame till 2 in the morning. Realizing only then that I should probably take a look at the notes I had accumulated.

Procrastination

A college professor, a screen writing teacher to be more specific, once explained to me, that by observing the world around us and learning from other people's stories we can accelerate our own learning curve without the necessity to fail on our primary attempts (learning through not only our experiences but the experiences of others as well). Of course this sound advice fell on deaf ears and I survived most of college by trial and error. Eventually I had a realization and subsequently success began to follow (or rather old habits that amounted to C+s and B-s and new habits that yielded A's).

In some areas however, this lack of experience and immense desire to wait till the last minute can be fatal. The following list is the three areas where you should not and cannot procrastinate if you want to have the best possible time in college.

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