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What To Do IF . . . You Think You HaveTo Sacrifice Fun To Pull Good Grades

Extracurricular activities can teach you valuable time-management skills, as Christopher Hooker-Haring, Dean of Admission and Financial Aid at Muhlenberg College, explains:
“Success as an adult often means juggling priorities and managing your involvement in several activities at once. College should be practice for that.”

Let’s suppose that you’re the star of your high school basketball team or that you live for the Yearbook Club. Does going to college and taking on the responsibilities of your courses mean you’ll have to give up sports and clubs just so you can pull good grades? Not at all, according to people who know.

“A big part of the college experience is the education of the whole person,” says Christopher Hooker-Haring, Dean of Admission and Financial Aid at Muhlenberg College in Allentown, Pennsylvania. He encourages students to begin their first semester by getting involved in extracurricular activities and then see if they need to cut back. “While academics should be your top priority, you also want to have as full an experience as you can,” he says.

Being involved in nonacademic activities can actually help freshmen become better students. Extracurriculars can . . .
• ease the transition to your new college environment

• relieve the tension of your academic work

• help you meet people with similar interests

• teach you valuable time-management skills.

Time-management and study skills can be particularly important early in your college experience. Students who have lots to do seem to be more focused; they force themselves to stay on top of things better than students with too much time on their hands.

Hooker-Haring adds, “Success as an adult often means juggling priorities and managing your involvement in several activities at once. College should be practice for that.”

Of course, if you find yourself overwhelmed and your grades start slipping, you can always cut back your time in a club, sport, or organization. How will you know you need help? You’ll know! The confusion you’ll feel, the assignments you’ll struggle with, the reading you won’t get done, the panicky feeling that things are out of control—these “warning signs” will be too obvious to overlook.

If you’re on a sports team, you might think you need to quit—but more than likely you won’t have to: most college sports programs monitor athletes’ academic progress closely. If an athlete needs help, it’s available from tutors and study groups or through an academic support center. The same kind of help is available to all students. You’ll need to be honest enough with yourself, however, in order to recognize the warning signs and ask for help.

So, should you abandon extracurricular activities and become a study freak? Absolutely not. Go for it! Test yourself. Play football; join the volleyball team; pursue your interest in photography or writing or theatre or ceramics or student government. Your greatest regret, warns Hooker-Haring, will be wishing—long after you graduate—that you had gotten more involved in and taken greater advantage of opportunities in college by pursuing your outside interests—or by developing new ones.

“College,” he says, “is a time to think about who you are and who you’d like to be. Outside activities have as much to do with shaping your experience as the classroom does. You only get one chance to be where you are now—with all the choices and opportunities available to you—and you should maximize the hours in every day by taking advantage of every opportunity.”

Paul Adams writes about education and business issues from his home in Brimfield, Massachusetts.

Source: http://www.careersandcolleges.com

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