Questions are like itches. You know you arent supposed to scratch, but sometimes you just ... gotta. One question that should remain tickly and untouched is the one everyones always asking: So, whats it like being a fourth year?
Ill tell you. Its dreadful. To be a senior in high school is to gaze at your future with bright eyes, smiling serenely at the open arms of the world. As a senior in college, lack of sleep will prevent you from getting the old orbs open in the first place, and if you somehow manage it, theyll be blurred and crusted over with Red Bull and pencil shavings because you zonked out with your head on your desk last night.
Fine. Thats an exaggeration. But, being in this transitory position forces students to make tough choices about their futures, while theyre simultaneously afflicted with nostalgia and a strong desire to reminisce about the past. And then were expected to go to class.
Im pretty pleased with my performance in college. I havent made any unforgivable errors, though Id like to remind readers that there are still nine months until graduation. There are, however, things that I wish I had done differently.
I regret taking the 100-level classes. I came from a very small high school where I wasnt academically challenged. The thought that there were 10,000 other students in my college classes, all thrashing like fish to get the A, was knowledge enough to intimidate me into Music 101. Four years later, I know that class numbers usually correspond with grades the higher I went, the higher I scored. This might have something to do with class size, but I think it also correlates with specificity of topic. I rarely learned anything of value in an introduction-level class, whereas when I rubbed elbows with older students, I discovered more about the topic and how the professors want arguments presented. The bottom line is if a course catches your eye, ask around; if youre lucky, youll be able to swim along with the upperclassmen.
I wish Id not had core requirements. A few fabulous schools Brown and Vassar, for example do not require an academic curriculum. (This means you dont have to take math, science, English or history if you dont want to.) Most schools have these requirements, and University of Virginia is one of them. I took four semesters thats two years of science and hated every second. I like to pretend Im equally as graceful with English as I am clumsy with chemistry, and if youre polarized too, core requirements are absolutely something to consider when youre mailing applications. By being forced to take subjects I didnt like and knew I wasnt good at, I was attending classes that bored me and lowered my GPA. Talk about a one-two punch.
Still, there are many things Im glad I did. I lived on-campus for two years. I made an effort to stay in close contact with my high school, summer and first year friends. I filled my schedule up with activities and organizations. I attended hundreds of University sporting events and utilized gym passes, student parking, discounts and that most crucial of all perks, free food. Ultimately, Im glad Im a fourth year.
Now excuse me, I have to take a nap.
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