College is stressful for the majority- managing your time, then balancing out tests, quizzes, extracurriculars, projects, etc. The word itself creates mixed emotions of the unknown. From early on, it’s viewed as an exciting chapter in life until you reach the age of decision making, identifying your necessities, filling out applications, writing admission essays, and anticipating the possible letter of acceptance or rejection. In 2016, the book, Where You Go Is Not Who You’ll Be by Frank Bruni, an American journalist, gives a new perspective on a brutal and deeply flawed competitive path. He wrote the book after constantly hearing frantic conversations over where to attend college.…
A Change in Perspectives To the everyday adult, college students are easy to come off as lazy, self-indulgent, disrespectful- what anyone would say of a young adult who lives for the party and gives less than their best efforts in school. On the contrary, to the everyday college student, this narrow-minded adult would be very wrong. It is not until Rebecca Nathans works in her book My Freshman Year that we have the adult challenging the prejudiced views non-students have on these young adults.…
Johnathan M. Kingman Professor Stuart Tucker English 1300-04 30 October 2016 College Pressures College is a time of anxiety and panic for many students all over the world. In the piece, “College Pressures” by William Zinsser, there is talk about the pressures of college and advises how to handle these moments of breakdown. Through the late nights and tears shed, you have feelings of high doubt and stress. Zinsser points out the four main pressures of college as being “economic pressure, parental pressure, peer pressure and self-induced pressure” (275). The cost to attend a private college continues to rise as inflation rises as well.…
In the advanced students’ college years, personal challenges will arise all the while…
Bringing Light to College Students Loneliness Haley L. Earhart ENG-105 Students enter college with high expectations due to the rumors spread by society. There are many things that college students do not expect when entering college, and one such thing is loneliness. Frank Bruni writes about something that he deems is often underestimated in the college freshman life, and that is the loneliness freshmen experience during, what is most students first time away from home. Bruni brings to light the extent of college loneliness through his effective use of Ethos, Logos, and Pathos, in his The New York Times article “The Real Campus Scourge” (Bruni, 2017).…
Incoming Freshman The thought of going to college can create fear in students. According to Randall S. Hansen, author of “Your First Year of College: 25 Strategies and Tips to Help You Survive and Thrive Your Freshman Year and Beyond,” there are multiple ways students can cope with the stress. In his article he gives helpful advice, “Whatever you do, be sure to be yourself and try to enjoy your college experience as much as possible. Expect to feel some stress and homesickness, but don’t let these issues wear you down.”…
The life of an American student is fast paced and full of ambition. From a very young age, children are consistently questioned in regards to their future plans. "What do you want to be when you grow up? What do you want to study in college?" Adults tend to ask kids these types of questions before they even bother to explain what a college is or what it means to have a job.…
For an inspired number of today’s youth, transitioning from high school into some institution of higher learning, such as a college or university, falls among the more profound turning points in their lives; more likely than not, to an extent that has been otherwise unprecedented before now. Regardless of individual circumstances, the fact still stands that college can be a major status quo change for many, if not all incoming students, and with drastically new experiences like these comes a variety of differing emotions felt across the spectrum. This is usually the first instance in which students must have to take charge of themselves in a more direct, forward sense; not only when dealing with the heightening of academic expectations, but…
I. Review of Literature The United States aims to increase the number of additional college graduates by eight million to meet future workforce demands and to maintain global competitiveness (U.S. Department of Education, 2011). To achieve this goal, requires increasing college going and college completion among marginalized groups and would be first generation college students (FGCS) (Matthews, 2014; U.S. Department of Education, 2011). Many scholars agree that in order to increase college going among this population of students, parent and family involvement is an essential component for college access programs (Cabrera & La Nasa, 2000; Dyce, Albold, & Long, 2013; Perna & Swail, 2001; Perna & Titus, 2005; Tierney & Auerbach, 2005; Tierney,…
These cultures are different for the student that it is hard to balance both of them at the same time. FGCS will feel that they don’t belong at the school, making it difficult to concentrate on their education and well-being. Another struggle that first-generation college students have to face in college is stress. Stressors that both FGCS and traditional students may include “adjusting to a college environment” and “general academic anxieties.”…
In “Why College Freshmen Need to Take Emotions 101,” Diana Divecha and Robin Stern describes that the transition to college can be very difficult and nerve-wracking for incoming college students. Most first-year students are trying to adjust to the new academic rigors that exceeds high school expectation. In college, the students are overwhelmed because these academic rigors are extremely challenging and difficult. To resolve this discrepancy, colleges have implemented college systems for students to achieve a higher and healthy education. However, this does not compensate for those who are impacted with unresolved personal issues that are left back home.…
From the moment high school students commit to their future colleges everything changes. They are no longer thought of as high school seniors or people apart of their hometown communities, they are thought in the light of the new institutions they will attend in the fall. Peers, teachers, and community members will now rank them with the same ranking their new school has. A select group of students, the excellents, will end up at elite schools like Harvard, Yale and Princeton to name a few. From the beginning of the these excellent students’ lives they have been earning elite education, defined as “prestigious institutions like Harvard or Stanford or Williams as well as the larger universe of second-tier selective school, but I [Deresiewicz] also mean everything that leads up to and away from them” (Deresiewicz 2).…
The Struggle of International Students at Community Colleges As the United States known to be the land of opportunities, the land of immigrants, better rights, equality, freedom, social interactions, better education, and good health care facilities are merely some of the many attractions that play a major role in attracting People from around the world. Some of these people who get attracted the most is students. Students from different regions around the world looking for opportunities to enroll in American schools that will ensure them a better future. International students bring a lot of diversity into their American communities and schools throughout their differences. However, as it seems easy and beneficial that international students attend American schools, there are many challenges and obstacles that international students face during their school career, such as getting admitted to a college, the cost of schools is relatively high, obtaining a visa is not an easy process, housing and personal accommodations, English struggles, and the ability to work.…
about three US jobs are created and supported in the retail, dining, telecommunication, health insurance, transportation and higher education sector. In the House Speaker’s district in Ohio, 1,528 international students contributed about $56 million to the district’s local economy and made support to 837 jobs. And in Alabama the home state of Senator Jeff Sessions, about $183 million was contributed to the local economy by 7,451 international students who also supported about 2,064 jobs (McDaniel, P. 2014, November 19). John Conant, the Economic department ISU chair has seen the financial impact that international students have in the school where he teaches. In Indiana State University, 8% of the student’s populations are international students and there are about 1000 of them.…
Never before, had I realized the numerous barriers faced by international students when choosing to attend their higher education in the United States or other foreign countries. Moreover, besides the obvious difficulties in being dislocated from family and friends, them exist subtle, non-obvious hardships that can affect an international student in a negative manner. These faint signals came to my attention during our large group meeting, which involved an international student panel. The greatest aspect affecting international students, from my perspective provided by the international student panel is absence of support from family members.…