“As a freshman, don’t worry about knowing what your major will be. Worry about it near the end of your sophomore year. (Though if you know you’re into the sciences, do your prerequisites early.)” Read the rest of this entry »
Spending time with the entire family is the most waited time. Today it is difficult to spend time together. The schedule of the members of family is different. The whole family can spend their time at week end. The best place in spending time together is at home. They don’t need to go out. To make the gathering in a nice place, make your home the place for the gathering. Read the rest of this entry »
10. Deal with special needs. If you have special needs, before you enroll in a college, contact Disability Services personnel so you can make sure campus facilities and services are adequate to meet your needs. If you haven’t been able to make these arrangements earlier, better late than never. Contact Disability Services as soon as possible to get what you need: interpreters, wheelchairaccessible facilities, readers, van services, and so on. As you register for classes, make sure your needs are going to be met. If they aren’t, you often have legal recourse under federal law. Read the rest of this entry »
7. Balance your workload. You’ve got enough to adjust to without overloading yourself with work. Bonnie Bloom of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, put it this way: “I wish I had known that the actual credit hours you get for a class may not accurately reflect the amount of time you will put into it. I came to college thinking my labs would be fun. Then I realized how many hours of work, in and out of the lab, I was putting in. And all for one credit! Suddenly, I realized that not having any term papers in my classes didn’t quite make up for having a lab report nearly every week due for my chem, physics, and bio labs. I was actually doing more work than my roommate, an English major!” Read the rest of this entry »
Parents always love their babies and kids. They always give the best for them. Since the baby in the mother’s womb, parents have given the best. Every mother always keep her womb well, she eat healthy food and drink to make both her and her baby always healthy. They drink vitamins and milk regularly. They also examine their condition to the doctor regularly. Read the rest of this entry »
4. Make several alternative schedules. As a freshman, you’re going to register last, so your odds of getting the exact schedule you want are about zero. Janice Race, a graduate of Queens College, described how she planned her schedule: “I would prepare three or four schedules and then decide which I liked best, next best, and so on. Since I am a prehistoric creature, the tool of choice was tracing paper. This way I could lay one sheet over another to see what I would end up if I made different combinations.” This method also allows you fall-back plans if you don’t get what you want. Read the rest of this entry »
“First semester freshman year, I hated my classes. But I got through them and learned which classes to stay away from. Philosophy and sociology courses have a lot of reading, so stay away from taking too many heavy-reading courses in one semester.” Read the rest of this entry »


