Tue
Aug 21 2007
02:21 pm
By: WhitesCreek
I'm not sure whether RoaneViews is a Sister, Brother, or Cousin Blog of KnowViews.com but we sure owe the proprietor for making this one happen.
And while RoaneViews is all about Roane County, some things are universal, like sending the kids off to college...Some of them for the first time.
So here's what folks think is important to tell an incoming Freshman:
Topics:
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Eco warriors and politics
- ‘Literally heartbreaking as a librarian’ 150 titles pulled from Rutherford County school libraries (TN Lookout)
- Trump’s Defense secretary nominee has close ties to Idaho Christian nationalists (TN Lookout)
- Top two Tennessee House Democrats retain caucus leadership (TN Lookout)
- Expecting challenges, blue states vow to create ‘firewall’ of abortion protections (TN Lookout)
- Community coalition issues demands for BlueOval City benefits, calls on Ford to negotiate (TN Lookout)
- Stockard on the Stump: Buy your hemp sticks before they clean the shelves (TN Lookout)
- Lawmaker accuses private-prison operator of celebrating potential boost in inmate population (TN Lookout)
- Federal agencies illegally okayed river dredging to restore railroad lost in Helene flooding (TN Lookout)
Science and stuff
- From electric cars to wildfires, how Trump may affect climate actions (Science News Daily)
- Dengue is classified as an urban disease. Mosquitoes don’t care (Science News Daily)
- Refurbished heart pacemakers work like new (Science News Daily)
- Ancient Central Americans built a massive fish-trapping system (Science News Daily)
- Satellite space junk might wreak havoc on the stratosphere (Science News Daily)
- Scientists identify a long-sought by-product of some drinking water treatments (Science News Daily)
- For adult chimps, playing may be more important than previously thought (Science News Daily)
- This is the first close-up image of a star beyond our galaxy (Science News Daily)
- Mars’ potato-shaped moons could be the remains of a shredded asteroid (Science News Daily)
- Here’s why turning to AI to train future AIs may be a bad idea (Science News Daily)
Discussing
- The Constitution Won, Trump Lost in Colorado...Now What? (1 reply)
- Our Very Own George Santos, TN GOP Congressman Ogles is Pretty Much Insane (1 reply)
- Destroying Jim Jordan, All Without Mentioning Jordan's Support For Sexual Abusing Athletes (1 reply)
- Want to See Who Owns Your State Senators and Reps? (1 reply)
- 9-11 Strangest Uninvestigated Fact (2 replies)
- It's Gettin' Real, Now...Gloria Johnson Made Wonkette! (1 reply)
- Does Rep Fritts Want School Shooters to Have Access to AR 15s? (2 replies)
- How many Trees Died Trying Save Us From Global Warming? (1 reply)
- Feel Good Friday,,,From our "If Only" Dept. (1 reply)
- Tennessee Education Worsens Under Bill Lee and GOP (1 reply)
- The Most Important Thing You Will Read Today! (1 reply)
- Friday Toons (1 reply)
Lost Medicaid Funding
To date, the failure to expand Medicaid / TennCare has cost the State of Tennessee ? in lost federal funding.
Sponsors
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Other "Views":
Local Interest:
Folks that Help:
Progressiveness:
Local News Media:
Local Government:
Candidates:
Local Interest:
Folks that Help:
Progressiveness:
- All Hat No Cattle
- American Progress
- Campaign for America's Future
- Daily KOS
- digby
- Paul Krugman
- Talking Points Memo
- Whitehouse.gov
Local News Media:
Local Government:
- City of Harriman
- City of Harriman Code
- City of Kingston
- City of Kingston Code
- City of Oliver Springs
- City of Oliver Springs Code
- City of Rockwood
- City of Rockwood Code
- Congressman Charles 'Chuck' J. Fleischmann
- Rep. Kent Calfee
- Rep. Ron Travis
- Roane County
- Roane Schools
- St. Sen. Ken Yager
Candidates:
Some tips from a longtime college teacher
As a former and sometime college teacher in both undergrad and grad school, I can offer a few tips. Some may seem obvious, but it is surprising how many students forget the basics.
Some Tips for College Students
Sign up early if you can.
1) The best sections of a course are usually the first sections; the worst is the last section. While the last section can indeed have a wonderful professor and excellent students, it is also true that often the very best students are more concentrated in the first-filled sections. They were committed to take the class earlier than the students who signed up late, and sometimes that same commitment to education carries over after registration. So, if you want a better chance of having a greater percentage of serious students in the section with you, try to sign up early.
Educate yourself about plagiarism, then don't do it.
2) Don't even think of plagiarizing. You *will* get caught. It is actually much easier just to do things right with quotes and references than it is to plagiarize successfully. If you are in doubt about a passage, ask the teacher *before* you hand in the assignment.
In college, it is (usually) assumed you can write your own sentences. Except when summarizing a long passage, there is no advantage at all to so-called paraphrasing. It is far better to give a properly quoted and referenced direct quotation. These actually count in your favor!
If a piece of text, even just a phrase, is on the Web, the teacher *will* know you took it if you don't put it in quotes and give a reference.
If a piece of text is not on the Internet, don't bet on the professor not having already read it. Many professors are very well-read in their fields. I remember one hapless student who copied most of his paper from a 1960s engineering book. Little did he know it was here on my shelf.
Remember if a piece of text or even a list or outline is good enough to plagiarize, your teacher probably already knows about it.
It is so much easier just to always give credit where credit is due!
And teachers do not usually take kindly to the many hours of extra work they have to do to document and process each instance of plagiarism. There were many reasons my heart always sank every time a student handed in something copied. :(
I strongly recommend taking this short free tutorial on how to avoid plagiarism:
(link...)
The tutorial only takes about 30-60 minutes but has been shown to be a great help. Do not assume you already know the rules about plagiarism. Some of the issues are subtle. Take the tutorial, then repeat it every term as a refresher.
Start work on each assignment as soon as you can.
3) Speaking of due dates: the best students start assignments, reading, papers, etc., early and work on them on a continuing basis. If you leave the work until the last minute, there is little time to ask questions, get interim feedback, or even get a second chance at an assignment before the due date.
Hand in interim versions of assignments if allowed, for early feedback.
4) You may approach most teachers with interim versions of a paper or assignment to make sure you are on the right track. Why wait until after the due date to find out you took a wrong turn? But always first ask politely!
Learn by teaching. Teach somebody.
5) There is no better way to learn something than by teaching it to someone else.
If you can't find another student who wants your help, seek out some other victim, however unlikely. If necessary, teach the subject to your child or younger sibling or employee or lunch buddy.
Show the other person how to do something from your class. Explain to him or her the who, what, where, why, and how of a concept from your assignment. But definitely teach someone else what you are trying to learn. This is highly effective.
Explain and check your work.
6) For each assignment, double- and triple-check that your work meets every requirement before you turn it in. Even check the obvious: are your name and section on the paper or file?
Make a checklist of all the things you were to do. It can even help if you attach or include the checklist with or in your assignment, with an explicit explanation next to each requirement about how you fulfilled it.
This sounds like overkill but can make a teacher much more friendly about allowing a re-do in case you missed a requirement or two. This also demonstrates organization--not a bad trait--and can even make it easier for the teacher to do the grading.
You should also explain your thinking.
On multiple-choice questions, write an additional little explanation of your reasoning, especially next to those questions that seemed unclear, tricky, or difficult.
This holds true for math, too. Here's some advice from a successful math major:
In math homework and tests, write out all the steps and give a written explanation of your reasoning for each step. Many math problems are missed because of skipped steps. At least half of doing well in math in school is (surprise!) English. Most of the rest of doing math is being neat and careful. Very little "math" is involved.
In all this writing, be very neat, not just for the teacher but also for yourself. Many math problems are missed because copying errors were made from one step to the next.
Explaining all the steps of your reasoning can also result in more partial credit being given, even when your answer was wrong.
Keep extra copies of all your work.
7) Make sure you keep backup copies of everything you turn in, just in case. Be prepared. Anything can happen.
Never pass up an opportunity for extra credit or make-up credit.
8) Most students who failed a class had passed up multiple opportunities to catch up and to make up missed work and failed tests. The best way to make sure you don't fail is to stay in very close communication with your teacher on an ongoing basis.
If you do badly on a test or assignment, ask the teacher nicely whether he or she has any advice for you, and whether there is any way you might be able to make it up.
In case of emergency or illness, talk with the teacher as soon as possible.
9) If you do have a health or family or work emergency that will keep you from doing your classwork for a while, don't be shy! Contact the teacher and ask for advice on how to handle it. The earlier you ask, the better.
It is rarely ever too late. Don't give up. Ask for advice or help.
10) If somehow you forget the advice above about keeping in close communication with the teacher, all may not be lost. Strictly speaking, things are only set in stone after the teacher hands in the grades. It may not be too late to save things, get an extension, do a makeup exam, whatever. The teacher does not owe you extra chances, so be extra nice all term if you can. Honey is better than vinegar.
One caveat: the teacher has no choice about the due date for the grades being handed in; that is one fixed deadline that even the teacher has to meet. And you need to give the teacher time to compose a make-up exam or assignment--a lot of work--plus time to grade your late or make-up work. Grading well takes time. So try to help the teacher help you, and don't expect the impossible.
Build a network.
11) Much of the value of attending college, other than eventually getting a diploma, is in forging personal and professional relationships with other students, teachers, and staff. You can learn most things at home and save the tuition. But you will meet wonderful people in college--and they will meet, and remember, you. Make the most of this opportunity.
How do you want the people you meet now in college to remember you in twenty years when you are looking for a job, a contract, or a vote?
I hope this helps! Of course feel free to write back. And best wishes with your schooling. "Learning is indeed its own reward."
-- OneTahiti
Learning how to Learn!
Thank you OneTahiti for your generous suggestions. This should be required reading for all high school students in anticipation of General Life Studies, college or not! But, yes, this is great information for the college-bound. Much appreciated.
You are welcome! And thank you
Tyler,
You are welcome! And thank you for the kind words.
I always enjoy your posts. :)
I've been trying to get time to post a comment in the "advice for the non-college bound" thread, but have been pretty busy. Maybe soon.
Thanks again!
-- OneTahiti
One more thing...
These are good tips for elementary and high school students too. :)
-- OneTahiti