How different is college from high school?
Quite.
• If you never had to study for a test in high school, then good for you – just means it’ll take you longer to learn how to study for college, because you
will have to study.
• In your lower-division classes, most of your professors will not know your name, and in fact won’t recognize your face at all. Office hours are the only way to get them to know you.
• Living away from your parents is awesome, but don’t let the freedom catch up to you – I see way too many kids who completely lose focus because the freedom gets to their heads.
• Tests are everything. In high school, you can do poorly on tests and still get an A in a class; in college, oftentimes your tests account for 80%+ of your grade (in my math class tests are 100% of your grade).
• Study groups seem like a stupid idea in high school (I resented my Calculus teacher for making us do that), but they’re very important in college – you’ll be relying on your peers a
lot for help. It definitely helps if the people you’re living with are in similar majors as you.
• Get used to professors who have thick accents – if you can’t understand half of what they’re saying, too bad.
• Walking to class between bells in high school is as strenuous as blinking compared to the kind of walking you’ll do in college if you’re at a large campus. I quite literally have classes that are
over a mile apart from each other (I’ve measured), and the passing period is only ten minutes. My bike is my best friend.
• Nobody cares if your car broke down on the way to a midterm – the professor certainly won’t care.
• And speaking of that, don’t ever count on pity in college.
• People are generally nicer at college, because you’re with a group of people who are roughly at the same intellect level as you, while in high school there’s a huge stratification that causes a lot of tension.
• … but the downside of this is that if you’re with a bunch of smart people, and your grades are curved, you better hope you’re smart-smart instead of just smart. You have no dumb people to take the brunt of the curve.
• Another thing that goes with this is that there are very few class clowns or people otherwise causing disruptions – if you disrupt a lecture, everybody will hate you.
• People smoke at college. A lot more than you’d expect. And drink beer. A lot more than you’d expect (especially if they’re frat-boys).
• Generally speaking, a college student’s day is shifted several hours ahead (or behind, depending on your point of reference) of a high school student’s day. In high school, it’s pretty common for somebody to wake up at 6 AM and go to bed at midnight; in college, it’s pretty common for somebody to wake up at 9 AM and go to bed at 3 AM.
• Parking is absolute hell at most large colleges. And expensive.
• And probably the most important point, and leading back to my first point: in high school, each day you spend a bajillion hours in class, and about two seconds on homework. In college, each day you spend a few hours in class, a bajillion hours doing homework, and a bajillion hours studying. Such is life.