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7 top tips to ensure you have the best-ever first year at university

If you're heading to to college, these tips will make that transition a little bit less stressful.

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7 top tips to ensure you have the best-ever first year at university
Young Post Readers

Moving from high school to university may be one of the toughest things you'll ever have to go through. A new life in a new place with new people … and no parents to buy groceries and cook meals for you. These tips may seem obvious at first glance, but they'll definitely come in handy as you set off on your post-secondary adventure!

1. Get to know your professors, and make sure they know you (in a good way)

Professors are humans, too - if they like you, they'll grade you better, give you more guidance, and maybe even provide recommendation letters. Don't be that kid who walks in late for every class, or opens a bag of crisps super loudly in the middle of a lecture. Especially don't be that kid who only shows up for the final and unwraps his textbook for the first time then and there. (True story.)

2. Use your summers wisely

I know we all dream of summers filled with holidays, movie marathons, and sleep. But you only have a few summers to make yourself stand out from the thousands of other students trying for the same job or post-university programmes as you. Attend summer school, study abroad, get an internship, volunteer - honestly, anything works.

3. Join everything, but only stick with what you love

In your first year, be sure to join as many organisations and activities as you possibly can - don't be lazy! This is a great way to make connections and get to know more people.

After a while, carefully select three or four activities that you really love and think will have leadership or growth opportunities along the way. These are the ones that you'll be proud to write about on your résumé!

4. Learn to pick the right classes

In most universities, class applications are first-come, first-serve … which means you actually have to wake up early to apply for them. Willingly get out of bed early just to sign up for an entire year of suffering? Yes. Getting up early once can help you actually get the classes you want, and at a time suitable for you. This way you can avoid having to wake up for an 8.30am class you don't even care about.

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If you're smart about it, you'll be able to have three-day weekends, every week! You can also use sites like Rate My Professors or Rate Your Lecturer to see if the professors for the classes you want to take are right for you.

5. Explore the opportunities and resources available to you

Universities are a treasure trove of resources; there are plenty of programmes where you will be fully funded … as long as you apply and are accepted! If you're interested in research, you'll probably find that the school will gladly provide you with grants.

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