During the program I expected to learn about how to do well in college. I expected this certain outcome by what others have received from the program. I also assumed I was going to be able to earn college credit by taking the summer courses in Biology or Chemistry. My past experiences in summer programs had a huge impact on my way of thinking on the outcome of this program. My prior experiences included me participating in Upward Bound at Wallace Community College during my high school career. While participating as a member of Upward Bound I had many encounters with how to go about doing college work. The instructors gave us college-related work and took us on many trips to different colleges around Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and even Arkansas. The opportunities Upward Bound gave me are endless and prepared me to further my education. In fact, how I first found out about the Rural Minority Health Scholars Program is by one of my Upward Bound instructors along with my high school counselors. As I started the RMHS program I focused on many career options, however; now since I have weighed out my options my decision is final. I want to become a Pediatric Nurse and then …show more content…
I knew that I was about to start my college career so I had to take serious action to prepare myself. I was willing to go above and beyond to get the right things in my mind and absorb all the essentials. I read books, watched videos on YouTube, and even ask actual college students about their intake on “college life.” I took all the information I could in hope that I would achieve my goal of passing my upcoming courses. I was astounded when I first started the program. I was nervous and shy, but also willing to speak to everyone and make new friends. Overall, I was super excited to be able to participate in the program. I can definitely say my attitude was set in a great place and was ready and willing to
Fear and anxiety plagued my mind during this transition, however my wife and daughter kept my mind at ease. The information and instruction that was provided from the Professors at Durham Tech galvanized something deep within me. I began to strive for goals that I thought were unattainable as a naïve adolescent. Instructors encouraged me to work hard and to be persistent when it came to the immense obstacles of my course work such as giving a presentation at an honors symposium as an honors student. After countless years of self doubt and negative feelings towards education as a whole, for the first time in my life, I felt like college was an option for
College is a life changing adventure, and I want it to be the best experience I can possibly receive. Attending Medgar Evers College, I have set high hopes and expectations. I hope to interact with people of diverse ethnicity. I want to learn more about different cultures and the individualization of people. And so far getting to know people on campus has been one of my greatest experiences. I have met so many wonderfully different people here. I hope to develop more independence. To be more responsible for keeping up with my schoolwork, preparing for tests, and making most out of my classes, even when they start early. Being successful in college is about more than handing your work in on time and passing classes. It’s about staying motivated. I know for a fact there will be a lot of demanding of my time. I know that procrastinating is not the best way of approaching situations. It is my responsibility to try to regularly motivate myself, even if it’s pulling
Starting college in August of 2008 was completely different than what I was expecting. My parents loaded up my car and sent me on my way to gain a college degree and experience life on my own, but looking back over the situation, I tend to ask myself numerous times do I think I was ready for college and the responsibilities that were to come along with it. Each time the answer was no. Being the first person in my family to go off to college away from home, I had no idea what to expect, or how to handle the things that come along with college life. Needless to say, it took me several major changes and me leaving my first university and transferring to one at home for me to get a handle of the situation.
When I first came to college, I did not have a solid idea of what the experience
Before I started at UCO, I completed courses at both Oklahoma City Community College and OSU-OKC. My very first semester of college was at OCCC where I was straight out of high school. I finished high school online, so starting over and going to class was a learning curve for me. I was very anxious and shy starting out. I remember the first day of class, it was Intro to Psychology, and before going into class I cried in my car for twenty minutes because I was so nervous. I thought college would be an extension of high school and that I didn’t want to go through again. Once I talked myself into going to class, the first hour I did not remember. However, I quickly realized that college is nothing
The program is both social and academic. I was too ambitious to productive during my last summer of high school. Thus, despite being financially struggle, I tried my best to use my savings to attend the program, with the help of tuition scholarships. In here, I built great connections with faculties and friends, whom I still stay in contact and who are helping me with my academic endeavor. Being an on child who was raised protectively in home and never allow to go on field trip, I thought this was a unique program that allows me to gain independence being far away from home and support myself. The program taught me how to get along with roommates and how to be friends with different people before my real college life started. In the beginning, I shed blood and tears, missing my parents so much. However, I knew that the most difficult obstacle to overcome is overcoming myself. New Start gave a new effect on my work ethic because of the experience I had with college students’ team work and with the conference that I presented. The transition to college became easier a few months
My parents are my heroes, and they inspire me everyday. Migrating to the US a year before I was born, they traded a comfortable life in Vietnam to work long hours at low wages in America in order to give their children unimaginable opportunities. Growing up, I was not aware of the sacrifices my parents made, but knowledge of them now gives me all the reason to be forever grateful for them and everything they make possible. I can never fully repay my parents, but I can do them right by doing the best with all I have got.
I came to college knowing, that so much of what I was over the first eighteen years of my life would be put to the test. Not simply because I was a conservative, in a liberal environment, but because I would be faced with four years, in a place that was in such
There was so much a sense of unity all around the campus. Everyone was helping everyone, everyone was smiling and having fun. It was such a community-like atmosphere, and I knew right then that this was the university for me. Shortly after attending the Fall Open House event, I felt in my heart that I needed to really get the ball rolling and acquaint myself with the school/college that I am trying to get in to make sure it will get me to where I want to be. I then organized a meeting with Mrs. Sharon Stroye the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate Programs for the School of Public Affairs & Administration concerning college admission. After speaking with her it sealed the deal for me. Rutgers is where I wanted to be. A Rutgers education is the foundation and next step towards my career in
Like other freshmen in college, it was difficult for me to adjust to college atmosphere. Once I comprehended how significant it was for me to get into graduate school I went to tutoring, assembled study groups, and fixed my concentration on my academics.
Being from El Paso Texas I always felt like there was more for me in other cities, but I never really got the chance to see what even my own state had to offer, but that all changed when I got accepted into Upward Math and Science. It gave me the push I needed in order to embark on my journey of becoming a well-rounded person. It gave me the real life experience I needed to determine if I would make it on my own when I go to college. Now I am able to see myself living far away from my parents which is something I cannot say for many of my peers. Upward bound also awakened something inside me. Before the program I was filled with self doubt when it came to many things, but spending my summer in Arlington with fellow students and mentors all
Raised in a single parent household, my childhood environments have been unstable to say the least. Since then, I have always been classified as an at-risk-child because of my family’s tendency of early childhood birth rates, and high dropout rates. Just about all of the family extended and nuclear has dropped out and participated in criminal activity by the age of 15. My mother, a veteran of the United States Army is a parent of six children and currently works as a direct service worker. Because she is a single-parent working minimum wage we are considered below the poverty line. She works on average eleven hours a day and sometimes can’t get the extra things that are needed for school. I started working not only to pay for my personal needs
The 2-3 months I have had at this school this semester have been crazy trying to transition to the college life. Being in my first semester in college I have just been doing what I came here to do. Of course, I find myself slacking off, but unlike everyone else I am able to catch myself and get back on track. As long as you stay focused on the big picture then you should be fine. However, I knew I had to adapt to everything quickly. I am glad I adapted to the environment and the people as fast as I did. It made it easier because I am here with a few people I already knew from high school. I am a music producer, but I came to college to study business. I never knew and still don’t understand the whole two year wait till you get to your actual major classes, but I guess that’s just how it goes. The music business can be very dirty so I needed to know what to do if a situation pops up
Throughout my lifetime I have listened to people reflect back on their college experiences and explain how college is supposed to be “the best experience of your life.” The summer after my senior year I use to try and imagine what my first semester was going to be like based on what I had heard people talk about in the past. After my first semester at NC State I realized that I couldn’t fully understand what college was like until I experienced it for myself. My first couple of weeks at Ohio State was rough and really tested my strength (mental and physical). I faced challenges and obstacles that I had never heard about in those past college experience conversations. All of a sudden there was no one to get me out of
Hearing so many good things and bad things about college I didn’t know what to expect and look forward to. That change my junior year knowing different college come every year I didn’t really pay it any mind what college I wanted to go to until ODU, Virginia State University and Virginia Teach came. It was Virginia State first year of visiting out school and I knew I wanted to go there I start getting e excited for college that were talking about their experience at college and what to look for when we graduated if we decided to go to college. Eager to start a new chapter college sound like it could be a little nerve wrecking but I thought I could handle it.