I need to know what to expect in college!

May 09, 2011 21:38

From all the mixed views I've heard about the difficulty level of college, all I can tell is that college is harder than adding 47 + 23 and easier than working in a concentration camp, so I decided to try and settle this once and for all:

Poll How did/do you feel about college?

EDIT: For the record, I voted in my own poll :P

addition, excitement, difficulty, poll, 47, college, nervous, 70, concentration camps, math, 23, expectations

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Comments 11

rovanda May 10 2011, 11:46:00 UTC
I haven't voted, because I liked AND hated it ( ... )

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matt1993 May 10 2011, 20:56:25 UTC
I haven't voted, because I liked AND hated it...

The reason I didn't put that as an option except for people who haven't been to college yet is because I intended for people who are or have been in college to answer with how they felt about most aspects of college.

I liked the social aspect - I finally made friends who shared a lot of interests with me, like science fiction, fantasy and games, and once I wasn't around all the same people I had gone to school with since I was 5, I was sort of able to start fresh and work on figuring out who I was rather than reacting to who everyone thought I was.

I bet I'd like that, too. Almost everyone I know acts like I'm the reincarnation of Einstein or something, so it'd be nice to meet some people who don't expect me to know every conceivable fact about the universe for a change. And it'd be nice talking to people who like math, computers, Mario, and Enya instead of sports and Halo. But even then, I would still need a little alone time every now and then and I'm afraid there won't be any ( ... )

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awehla May 10 2011, 13:54:01 UTC
I did a BA(Hons) in Literature and Philosophy for three years (our degrees are only 3 years for some reason). I started off on the Humanities open programme so in my first year I did Humanities Computing and History as well as Literature and Philosophy ( ... )

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matt1993 May 10 2011, 20:42:49 UTC
I found getting all the assignments in on time and managing my time and motivation more challenging than understanding the subject matter.

I understand - in high school, I often forgot to turn in my assignments after I've done them :(

Oh and the social aspect was hard - I only made three friends I saw outside of class and I don't see any of them now 7 years (nearly 8 years) after graduation. Other people I know seemed to make loads of friends (and are still in touch with some of them) and really easily but my campus was in the middle of the countryside and was more of a commuter uni where people live at home and then commute in, a lot of people were cliquey and once they'd made friends that was it there was no way in and I spent weekends in my first year going back to Luton to see David and then in my 2nd year and 3rd year I was living with David and a commuter. Funny enough in the 2nd year when I was commuting and no longer cared about making friends I made more friends. Some people clearly only used me to sit next to in class and ( ... )

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awehla May 11 2011, 11:46:37 UTC
Well if you're not interested in making friends at college then that gives you plenty of time to concentrate on learning which is the main reason to go to college.

What are you thinking of studying at college?

Lisa
x

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matt1993 May 11 2011, 18:26:48 UTC
Mathematics and computer science. :)

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matt1993 May 11 2011, 18:30:46 UTC
are you saying you dont want to go to college?!??!
I want to go to college, but I'm afraid that it might be really hard for me.

You're really brilliant & smart
Smart with math & computers, maybe, but if I'd had to do all the paperwork-type stuff in high school (FAFSA, transcript request form, graduation invitations, and so on) on my own, I wouldn't have made it. And, since I almost have to do that kinda stuff on my own in college... :(

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matt1993 May 14 2011, 02:20:34 UTC
I'm already accepted at the college I'm planning on going to, and they actually have an autism support program (though I may or not get in it because there's a long line of applicants), so I probably won't have to worry about the scholarships and loans and stuff unless I have to do them again the second semester or second year of college.

Is the not-having-to-pay-student-loans back thing just for people with disabilities?

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pathvain_aelien May 13 2011, 17:56:45 UTC
"...all I can tell is that college is harder than adding 47 + 23 and easier than working in a concentration camp." Lol.

I liked it.

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matt1993 May 13 2011, 18:53:25 UTC
:)

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