Campus
involvement opportunities -
Orientation programs often invite a number of people to talk with your student
about campus involvement. Sometimes these sessions take the form of an
activities showcase where a broad range of campus groups set up tables or
displays that allow current members of these groups to interact with you and
your child or pass out information about their organization. Other times a few
offices will talk specifically about the multitude of ways to get involved and
then show students how to find clubs to join and what to expect from those
clubs. Either way the goal is the same. To let new students know that
college is more than just class time, and being happy and healthy on campus
means being involved outside of class.
Safety and
emergency information -This is one
of the sessions that is often held jointly with parents and students. We know
that you are concerned about your child’s safety and even if your child doesn’t
tell you, he is too, even if
its just because he doesn’t want you to freak out. Campus Safety is vital
to the academic mission of the university, because it is extremely difficult to
learn in an environment in which you don’t feel safe.
Campus
police or security will often give students details about how to stay safe on
campus and what to do in an emergency. Advice like locking doors, being aware
of one’s surroundings, and securing property are all common tips provided by
campus police, and it’s important for students to realize that their actions
can play a major role in their own safety. Having this session with parents and
students together assures you that your child has received this information as
well.
Enrollment - The vast majority of summer orientation
programs also include the student’s enrollment in his first semester of
classes. These enrollment sessions are usually held for the students alone so
they can sit down with an adviser, counselor or peer mentor to select classes
and plan a schedule. Keep in mind that a lot has changed since we were in
college and had to stand in line for hours to get a schedule that was virtually
etched in stone when we left the registrar’s office. Today, students can
easily change class schedules online. This freedom is both a blessing and a
curse.
Having the
flexibility to change one’s schedule almost daily until classes start is very
convenient, but please remind your child that just because he can change his schedule, doesn’t mean that
he should. Students
have been known to accidentally enroll in senior or graduate level classes
because the names of the classes were similar to the ones in which they were
enrolled. When this happens it is not uncommon for the class to be
automatically dropped from the schedule, leaving the student short on classes
and credit hours.
Advisers usually recommend that students can change sections or times of classes as long
as they enroll in the same classes they had enrolled in during orientation. So,
a student may freely change from the 8:30am section of English Composition I
into the 9:30am section of English Composition I, but should avoid changing
from English Composition I into World Literature I even though they are both
introductory level English classes. Once he gets into the swing of
college there will be plenty of time to explore classes and take more diverse
coursework, but for now, it’s best to leave well enough alone.
* Suggest
that your child enroll in early classes at least three days per week, or at
least wake up as early as possible. Taking classes from 9:00am or earlier each
day means that students aren’t sleeping through half of their days. They
will still stay up late, but early risers tend to have better time management
skills and more time during the day for classes, study, work and other
activities.
If, at the
end of orientation, you still have questions or if once you return home and
have a chance to process all the information you received, you still have
questions, don’t hesitate to call the appropriate office or the general number
for the orientation or parent relations office. We are used to fielding calls
and emails about just about anything and can find the appropriate person to
answer your questions.
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