I'm in year 12, and I'm planning on going into a psychology course. Just to put my mind at ease, I'm wondering what life is usually like on a day-to-day basis. For example, things like:
- how much of the day is spent at lectures and classes
- how many hours of study one should do between classes
- are there typical weekends without any classes
- are there commonly social gatherings and parties on campus; or, if not, would i have much time in the week to go out and do my own thing
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Uni life will be completely different to high school life. To start, no uniforms and no compuslary attendance is required. You will have much more freedom to do the things you wanted to do. E.g have a afternoon beer with mates at a local pub during happyhours. Normally with each subjects, it will involve a 1 or 2 hour lectures per week and 1 or 2 hours for tutorials. With psychology, you might have labs with will add an addition 3 hours to your weekly timetable. With study committments it differs between people, when mid-year exams or assignments are about to be due, you will tend to be studying alot. however, any other times it can be a bit of a cruise. Just a general idea. Normally, the first few weeks of the semester is easy, however as weeks goes on, your work load will increase dramatically and you will need to start to utilise these lunchtime hours to catch up with readings and finish assignments. hope this helps. |
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Hey james,
This equates to maybe attending University for 3-4 days a week, though depending on the capacity of the class you can squeeze it into 3 days, but if classes are full you may be forced to go 4 times a week. Remember you are not obliged to attend every lecture or tutorial, at University the powerpoints which are displayed in class are always uploaded on the Uni's intranet, but of course you should still attend to understand the content!
In Uni, you really only need to do the first and second semester exams, and only a couple of tests in class, many courses have take home tests! And then again some courses have a single test=70% of your semesters mark. In summary, just reading the lecture notes before-hand and then again after+reading the applicable textbook chapter+the designated questions=success.
And don't forget the months worth of holidays! End of year holidays go from October/November till March! |
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