Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

The Hilltop

CAMPUS

Advice to Freshmen

By Maya Cade, Special To The Hilltop
Posted 9:00 PM EST, Mon., Sept. 5, 2016

Freshmen: Let me keep it real 100—Your life is about to change. You’re a Bison now. Let me also be really honest when I say that I’m only typing this letter to you now because I did not graduate in four years. (I’m an expected December graduate.)

But you don’t have to be like me, there are four keys to success that you need to be great.

First, visit your advisor at least each semester. You’ve probably heard this throughout orientation week and brushed it off but it’s true. It is important that you become familiar with your advisor—they should know not only your name but also your face. A major part of the ‘Howard finesse’ is being helped by people who recognize you.

Also, don’t be in a rush to do anything. During my freshman year I was in a rush to ‘discover myself.’ In retrospect, it was a silly idea. As Howard students and human beings we are constantly evolving and each year at Howard I discovered more about *myself* without trying. Don’t be in a rush to change as it often happens organically. I don’t want to be the one to crush your #relationshipgoals but a Howard romance, while nice, is unlikely. You also may not be with your current bae forever and that’s okay too.

More, call home!! Call home when you’re happy. Call home when you’re sad. FaceTime your mom or dad when you miss your dog. Skype your sibling when you feel an empty feeling you can’t explain. Call your best friends to ask them about their post-high school experiences. (I promise not everything can be explained via text.) It’s okay to miss home–don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. And don’t put on a front for your parents. The college experience is tough. They understand.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

Finally, understand that the Howard Experience goes beyond the classroom. Some of my fondest Howard memories were not made in the classroom. Many of them were on the benches on the yard, in the halls of the Smithsonian and the hallways of my freshman dorm. Branch out. Do something new and realize that your experiences are shaped in and out of the classroom. There are free things that you can do (and a bunch are listed in this issue!)

That’s it. Be great. The world is yours.

Advertisement

You May Also Like

Columns

Through the Belt and Road Initiative, China has sought to economically develop Africa by supporting the construction of key infrastructure. Reports of recent years,...

NEWS

Students at Tuskegee University express disappointment with campus security and the administration’s response, following a fatal shooting during the university’s centennial homecoming.

Variety

A 90-minute production at Woolly Mammoth Theatre uses a blend of satire and honesty to shed light on the Black experience in America and...

NEWS

Following the 2024 presidential election, members of the LGBTQ+ community express fear and concern with Donald Trump as the president-elect.