One best piece of advice: Most professors consider college to be a student's fulltime job. That means a student with average abilities can earn average grades if they put in an average US workweek of 48 hours. You would be the best judge of your own abilities compared to other college students. Average GPA is usually around 2.65 (C+/B-). If you are an average student and want to get a higher GPA, then more effort is probably necessary. If you are an above-average student and want an average GPA, then less time can be put into studying. Taking five classes a semester means that about nine hours should be devoted to each class each week for a three-credit course. After taking three hours for class, that leaves about six hours for reading the book, doing assignments, reviewing notes, and then studying. This should be quality study time and not filled with competing thoughts.
By becoming an academic, do you mean becoming a college professor? The best advice there is don't do it unless nothing can convince you to do something else. There are only a few rewards. It can take as many as ten years of hard work after college to land that first tenure-track job. On average, you work 56 hours per week 50 weeks per year because there is a lot more to do than just teaching. You might start around $35K per year and never make more than $60K in your life, even though physicians and lawyers with the same education will earn three or four times that. There will be 5% of your students that you are proud to have taught and another 5% who are grateful for your effort but 25% will be resentful and 50% believe they did it all by themselves. Only the top tenth of a percent of scholars will receive high recognition of their peers and more often will have their ideas rejected and nobody even read their published articles. The job description of a college professor is very different from the 1950's-60's movie image we all have of an easy-gracious-respected life of a scholar. So, only get into it becasue you love nothing else.
2006-07-22 09:31:08
·
answer #1
·
answered by fencer47 3
·
1⤊
0⤋
Best advice I can offer for success in college is this: Take your work seriously, do your best, and be willing to learn as much as you can.
As for becoming an academic, the KEY here is not only being a subject matter expert in a particular area, but also having the ability to share that knowledge with others.
There are lots of people who "really know their stuff," but not everyone makes a good teacher.
And get used to constantly upgrading your skills and possibly having to publish. For teachers, schooling really never ends because there's always some sort of professional development activity for use to do.
2006-07-22 13:49:30
·
answer #2
·
answered by msoexpert 6
·
0⤊
0⤋
i've got been married two times in the previous, so i do no longer care if i do no longer marry lower back, yet I won't say that I "won't" marry lower back...it is not a precedence in any respect, yet i could desire to have somebody to proportion my existence with... i've got been single for a protracted time now (the extra effectual area of the previous 11 yrs) so i'm comfortable with it in basic terms being me, no count if this is how something of my existence is going...I definitely have acquaintances and relatives and hobbies, so this is by no ability boring (yet sometimes it gets lonely)...
2016-10-08 05:07:47
·
answer #3
·
answered by sashi 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Write a book! Make a difference. People will listen to you say the exact same words that you used to say with different ears now. Don't get upset, use your gift wisely.
2006-07-22 08:48:11
·
answer #4
·
answered by Wise ol' owl 6
·
0⤊
0⤋
Im a hotty
2006-07-22 08:36:35
·
answer #5
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋