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Course Syllabus
Critical Dates - Spring 2002
The Differences: High School vs. College
Time Management
Testing Tips
DISCOVER
University Studies
Who Wants to be a Graduate?
Campus Facilities How
to Calculate Your GPA |
THE DIFFERENCES:
HIGH SCHOOL VS. COLLEGE

PERSONAL FREEDOM
|
... IN HIGH SCHOOL |
... IN COLLEGE |
|
High School is mandatory and free
(unless you choose other options). |
College is voluntary and expensive. |
|
Your time is usually structured by others
(parents and/or teachers). |
You manage your own time. |
|
You need permission to participate in
co-curricular activities. |
You must decide whether to participate in
co-curricular activities. |
|
You need money for special purchases or events. |
You need money to pay for basic necessities. |
|
You can depend on your parents and teachers to
remind you of your responsibilities and help you set priorities. |
You will be faced with many moral and ethical
decisions you have not previously had to face. You
must balance your responsibilites and set priorities. |
|
All correspondence is addressed to your parents.
They read it and tell you what you need to know. |
All correspondence will be addressed to you.
You must read all your mail, as you will be
responsible for its content. |
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Guiding Principle: You will usually be
told what your responsibilities are and corrected if your
behavior is out of line. |
Guiding Principle: You are now
responsible for what you do and what you don't do, as well as
for the consequences of your decisions. |
CLASSES
|
Every 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 a
day-30 hours per week-in class. |
You spend 12 to 16
hours each week in class. |
| The school year is 26
weeks long; some classes extend over both semesters and some
do not. |
The academic year is
divided into two separate 14-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 may seem lighter than they are. |
| Teachers carefully
monitor attendance. |
Some professors may
not formally take attendance (most will), but they are still
likely to know whether or not you attend. |
| Classes generally have
no more than 35. |
Some classes may have
75-100 students. |
| You are provided with
textbooks at little or no expense. |
You must budget
substancial money for textbooks that usually will cost more
than $200 per semester. |
| You are not
responsible for knowing what it takes to graduate. |
Graduation
requirements are complex and differ by major. Get and
keep a copy of the Undergraduate Buttetin in effect when you
matriculate (become a fully accepted student). It spells
out the requirements that apply to you. |
TEACHERS
| Teachers check your completed
homework. |
Professors may not always check
completed homework or even collect it, 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 help or tutoring. |
Professors are usually open and
helpful, but most expect you to ask for help or tutoring. |
| Teachers are often available for
conversation before, during, or after class. |
Professors want and expect you to
attend their scheduled office hours. |
| Teachers have been trained in
teaching methods to assist imparting knowledge. |
Professors have been trained in
experts in their particular area of specialization. |
| 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, 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 textbook readings. |
| Teachers often write information
on the board to be copied into 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,
and, therefore, good attendence, are a must. |
| Teachers communicate knowledge
and facts, sometimes drawing direct connections and leading
you through the thinking process. |
Professors expect you to
think about and synthesize (put together) 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's due, and how you will be graded. |
STUDYING
| You may study outside of class as
little as 0 to 2 hours a week, and this may be mostly
last-minute preparation. |
You need to study at least 2 to 3
hours outside of class for every hour in class. |
| You often need to read or hear
presentations only once to learn all you need to know. |
You need to review class notes and
text material regularly. |
| You are expected to read short
assignments that are then discussed, and often re-taught, in
class. |
You are assigned substantial
amounts of reading and writing that may not be directly
addressed in class. |
| Guiding Principle: You will
usually be told in class what you needed to learn from
assigned readings. |
Guiding Principle: It's up
to you to read and understand the assigned material.
Lectures and assignments are based on the assumption that you
have done this. |
TESTS
| Testing is frequent and usually
covers small amounts of material. |
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 only
have 2 or 3 tests in a semester. |
| Makeup tests are often available. |
Makeup tests are seldom an
option; if they are, you must request one. |
| 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 courses or 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
| 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 provide most of the course grade. |
| Extra credit projects are often
available to help you raise your grade. |
Extra credit projects, generally
speaking, cannot be used to raise a grade in a college course. |
| Initial test grades, especially
when they are low, may not have an adverse effect 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 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 standard for your major.
Most majors departments require a student to maintain a 2.25
GPA in the major and a 2.0 cumulative average. |
Guiding Principle: "Effort
counts."
Courses are usually structured to reward a "good faith
effort." |
Guided Principle: "Results
count."
Though "good faith effort" is important in regard
to the professor's willingness to help you achieve
good results, in the grading process, it will not substitute
for results. |
| *Adapted from Southern Methodist University's
web page |
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