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5 Ways to Keep Your Newfound Freedom from Bringing You Down

Today you get a break from my writing.  We welcome Kelly Kilpatrick, who has written a guest post about settling down after you’ve started settling in.  Enjoy!

Photo by svilen001

Photo by svilen001

It happens to freshers every year: some, not all, take full advantage of their newfound freedom and forget why they are at the university to begin with.  Whether it’s dyeing their hair bright purple, piercing their favorite body part, or staying up ‘til dawn, something happens that makes some people break out of their shell the first year.  It’s hard enough keeping up with the coursework, so many get lost in the shuffle.  Here are five ways to reign yourself back in if you are falling into this trap.

  1. Stay focused.  Remember why you are here in the first place, and that is for an education.  Of course, your time at the university will be filled with new friends and experiences, but don’t let that get in the way of your education.  Stay focused on what needs to be done so that you will have the luxury of being able to have fun later.
  2. Limit social engagements.  There will always be something going on.  Try at first to limit yourself to social engagements when you are done with your coursework for the week.  This way, you won’t be thinking about what you have put off and you’ll be able to enjoy yourself.  If you spend too much time going out, the work will pile up and you’ll sacrifice your social life later anyway.
  3. Use your time wisely.  Take time between classes to review notes and readings.  If you have an extra hour, work on an upcoming paper or study for an exam.  Doing this will solidify your knowledge of a topic and give you more time to relax later.
  4. Set goals and reward yourself.  In addition to budgeting time, it is good to give yourself achievable goals and then reward yourself when these goals have been accomplished.  It’s better to get things done than to sit idly and wait until the last minute to start working on projects.  Setting small goals will help break down larger assignments into more manageable increments.
  5. Be yourself.  If you have changed to suit your new friends, keep in mind why they became your friends to begin with.  It’s natural to want to fit in with a crowd, but your new friends initiated contact with you for some reason.  If you really feel like you are expressing yourself now that you’ve moved out, let your spirit soar, just don’t let it supersede the importance of your ultimate goal.

This post was contributed by Kelly Kilpatrick, who writes for BestCollegesOnline.com. You can reach her at kellykilpatrick24 at gmail dot com.

TheUniversityBlog a year ago: October 2007

Welcome to October.  Hopefully most of you are happily settling in to the new academic year.  You lucky things!

October last year was a busy month on TheUniversityBlog.  I covered homesickness, conversation, employment, and money, among other things.  Here’s my pick of the highlights:

Help for the Hopelessly Homesick

Moving away from home is already a big move.  That’s before you consider the amount of change you’ll encounter in your first few months at uni.  Inevitably, homesickness happens.  This huge post covers all sorts of advice.

Turning Smalltalk into Bigtalk: 7 ways to find things to talk about

Striking up a conversation is difficult enough, but getting into a flow of ideas to chat about can be boggling.  With a few pointers, you can boggle no more.

Pushing Toward Employment Nirvana Series

Who says you have to wait for the end of your degree before seriously considering your future employment?  As an increasing number of students need to work part-time, the CV isn’t unheard of.  So why not make it as good as you can from the outset?

Your Money Series

The world’s economy may be looking scary, but you can do your bit to look after your own pennies…

Penguins at Derby bringing students together

I’ve been checking out the shortlists for this year’s Times Higher Education Awards.  One entry stood out for me.  Shortlisted for the Marketing Initiative of the Year award, the University of Derby have achieved something impressive off the back of something so simple.

Photo by tobybarnes

Photo by tobybarnes

Derby’s shortlist mention on THE’s website explains all:

“Before their 2007 exams, Derby sent 3,300 applicants a squeezy penguin stress toy and a leaflet with exam and revision tips from an academic. A week later, the university followed up with an email encouraging applicants to take photos and videos of themselves with their penguin over the summer. The penguin became cult figure on social networking sites and helped Derby improve its conversion rate – the proportion of those offered a place taking up the offer rose from one in five to one in four.” [Source: THE]

This stood out for me as an effective way of engaging current students at a time of stress, it helped solidify a community spirit amongst the general populous of the university, and the promotion spread beyond campus onto social networking sites for the world to see.  In the process, prospective students were more likely to be drawn to Derby as a good place to study.

Let’s break it down:

Engage students at a time of stress – On a specific and local level, a penguin stress toy may seem somewhat gimmicky, albeit a bit of fun.  But combined with this were exam and revision tips, which genuinely do focus students on what they can do to achieve their best.  The point is, a number of students who received these tips will have been grateful for them.

This promotion didn’t involve hard sell, it simply held out a helping hand to students in need.

Help to solidify a community spirit – Universities have both staff and students, naturally.  The magic is to achieve two things:

  • Bring all students together as a community, working toward similar goals and understanding the benefits of focusing as a team;
  • Give students an awareness of staff’s purpose and vice versa, so each can appreciate the bigger picture.  In the process, help inspire an attitude of “We’re in this together”.

Firstly, Derby’s mailout gave tips to students from the expert viewpoint of an academic member of staff.  Good start.  Secondly, the e-mail to ask everyone to photograph or video themselves with the penguin over the summer break kept links alive with the uni.  They care about their students and want interaction.  Not everyone would jump at the chance, but that doesn’t matter when an enthusiastic selection of students take up the challenge.

Derby managed to turn a simple mailout into a ‘social event’.  Students are more likely to feel part of a fun community.

Promotion spreads across the Internet and shouts out to prospective students – The simple things can deliver awesome results.  You could say that a squeezy penguin became a temporary mascot for Derby.  Even amongst those who didn’t know what the penguin was all about, the enigma of the penguins led to more interest in Derby, as well as a wish to have one of the prized penguins.

I’m genuinely impressed by how this promotion has worked on so many levels.  I wish the University of Derby the very best of luck and hope they get that Times Higher Education Award (due to be announced on 23 October 2008).

As I said at the start of this post, it’s a great achievement to make such a positive impact off the back of something simple.  Can any of you think of a time when you’ve been wowed by a simple gesture?  Do you feel a strong sense of community within your university, or would you like to see more done?

HP Freshman 15 – Fantastic laptop prize packages up for grabs!

Welcome to the HP Freshman 15 series of competitions.  Today, 15 student-related sites are announcing the opportunity for students to win a laptop, external hard drive, and all-in-one printer/copier/scanner.

Each participating site will give away one system.  TheUniversityBlog is one of those sites ready to make one lucky student very happy.  The dates of each competition are as follows:

We are the Freshman 15.  Each of us is running our own competition.  Dependent on each participants rules, that gives you 15 possible chances of winning.  Good, eh?

Stephanie at Poorer Than You is announcing her competition first, this Friday.  I’m announcing the final competition, on Friday 24th October.

I will be giving away a Hewlett-Packard dv5t laptop (HP’s American shop has more info), plus a 500Gb Pocket Media Hard Drive (and docking station), an HP Photosmart C6380 all-in-one printer, and a carry bag.

The dv5t laptop won Laptop Magazine’s Editor’s choice earlier this year.  It will comprise of the following specs:

Windows Vista Home Premium (with Service Pack 1)
Intel Core 2 Duo Processor T9400 (2.53GHz)
15.4″ WXGA High-Def Widescreen (1280 x 800)
3Gb DDR2 Memory
Intel Graphics Media Accelerator X4500
250Gb SATA Hard Drive
Webcam
802.11b/g WLAN
Blu-Ray player (includes Dual-layer 8x DVD+/-R/RW capabilities)

The laptops being given away throughout the HP Freshman 15 competition are dv4t, dv5t and dv7t models.  Each is slightly different, but all are good.  If the specs above mean nothing to you, let’s just say that none of the systems should disappoint!

I don’t own a laptop myself, so the winner can be happy that I will be jealous of their good fortune! 😉

The flexibility of a laptop of your own means you won’t be restricted to the campus computers.  You can work where you want, when you want. If you live on campus and your halls have network points, you can access the Internet in your own room, which can help your study no end (and give you a break when it all becomes too draining…no procrastination, mind!).  You’ll also have a chance to stay entertained, watch DVDs (and Blu-Rays), print photos and essays, and so on.

So stay tuned in the coming month.  A laptop would be just the thing to start a new academic year…