You need permission to participate in
extracurricular activities.
You must decide whether to participate in
extracurricular activities. (Hint: Choose wisely in the first semester and then add later)
You need money for special purchases
or events.
You need money to meet basic necessities.
You can count on parents and teachers to remind you of your responsibilities and to guide you in setting priorities.
You will be faced with a large number of
moral and ethical decisions you have not had to face previously. You must balance your responsibilities and set priorities.
Guiding principle: You will usually be told what your responsibilities are and corrected if your behavior is out of line.
Guiding principle: You’re old enough to take responsibility for what
you do and don’t do, as well as for the consequences of yourdecisions.
High School Classes
College Classes
Each day you proceed from one class
directly to another.
You often have hours between classes; class times vary throughout the day and evening.
You spend 6 hours each day—30 hours a week in class.
You spend 12 to 16 hours each week in
class.
The school year is 36 weeks long; some
classes extend over both semesters and
some do not.
The academic year is divided into two
separate 15 week semesters, plus a week
after each semester for exams.
Most of your classes are arranged for you.
You arrange your own schedule in
consultation with your academic adviser.
Schedules tend to look lighter than they
really are.
Teachers carefully monitor class attendance.
Professors may not formally take roll, but
they are still likely to know whether or not you
attended.
Classes generally have no more than 35 students.
Classes may number 100 students or more.
You are provided the textbooks at little or no expense.
You need to budget substantial funds for
textbooks, which will usually cost more than $200 each semester.
You are not responsible for knowing what it takes to graduate.
Graduation requirements are complex, and differ for different majors
and sometimes different years. You are expected to know those that
apply to you.
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 you to relate
the classes to the text book reading.
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.
Tests in High School
Tests in College
Testing is frequent and covers small amounts.
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 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.
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.
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 High School
Grades in College
Grades are given for most assigned work.
Grades may not be provided for all assigned work.
Consistently good homework grades may help raise your
overall grade when test grades are low.
Grades on tests and major papers usually constitute
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 affect 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.
If you receive notice of low grades on a mid-term progress
report, see your academic advisor.
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/institutional minimum -- typically
a 2.00 or C average (could be higher in some majors
or programs).
Guiding principle: "Effort counts". Courses
are usually structured to reward a "good faith
effort."
Guiding principle: "Results count." Though
"good faith effort" will likely make your
professors more willing to help you achieve good results,
it will not substitute for results in the grading process.