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Old Jun 22, 2012, 04:10 PM
Dragonfly33 Dragonfly33 is offline
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Member Since: May 2012
Posts: 61
Quote:
Originally Posted by Confusedinomicon View Post
Depends on you. Some people do well online.

The biggest thing I suggest is going to class during the regular schedule when deadlines arent ontop of one another. It will be easier to manage your time thay way. Sometimes taking a m/w/f schedule is easier because lessons are more spread out. Talk to a counselor and see if they can help you create a schedule that works best for you in the future. Dont stack intensive classes during the summer. Stay in classes with professors you like -- the class doesn't need to be easy but you need to feel comfortable. There are usually multiple professors/grad students/and teachers for basic gen eds. Find the resources on campus and utilize them.

I just listed stuff. Hopefully something helps.
Thank you. I understand that it depends on me but I was wondering if people with BP did better online.

I was also wondering if it gets easier (like when you first exercise) or not.

I don't want to divulge my "medical issues" to a community college advisor. Besides, talking to them is like asking for school advice from a grocery store clerk. I needed help prior to summer session starting, so I went there (it seemed logical to me) and left scratching my head. I'm not the only person that feels it's a waste of time.

I thought if I took both classes on the same day it would give me the day in between to get homework done. Thursday isn't so bad, I have 4 days to do homework.

I wasn't aware of this professors demeanor until class started. I obviously wouldn't have chosen him had I known. Teachers and classes are very limited in the summer, fall will have a much wider range of options.

Where might I find the stuff you listed? Thanks again.