If you are a college-bound high school graduate, change is coming this fall that will have storylines involving friends, family, and new academic and geographic horizons. Adapting to this radical life transformation will haunt you less if you learn how to prepare for college during summer. This includes vital social, academic, relocation, and health tips that can make or break your freshman year experience.
If the college experience was a road trip, reading would be the vehicle. So, get your reading headed in a good direction. Use the back of your college’s summer reading list to jot down these additional assignments:
If you don’t know anything about the city, campus, residence hall, apartment, or house you will be calling home, knowing what to take will be impossible. Here are some questions you must answer before starting your packing list:
If you want to reduce the number of times you start a sentence with “I should have brought,” check out some of the complete college packing lists online. And save yourself some time and hassle reviewing the things you don’t really need.
Before high school is a distant memory, consider names and phone numbers you don’t have in your contacts list but might need someday. Log that information, then add contact information for insurance companies, former employers, your doctor and dentist, acquaintances, distant relatives – anyone you might need to reach.
Also consider the papers you might need to take:
Go over the list with your parents, and also have them help you create an emergency contact list.
If you have a Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, or other social media account that could create a bad first impression, clean it up. You won’t be the only person trying to get an advanced look at the people you will be rooming, learning, and working with. Tidying up your digital footprint should also account for the instructors and potential employers who could stumble upon your social media history.
There are a number of other ways to get your digital toolbox packed for college:
A little research on campus internet access, including Wi-Fi hotspots and how many bars your smartphone will have, can change your digital toolbox packing list.
Don’t wait until you walk into your new residence to connect with the people who will share your living space and classrooms. Start by using social media, including the school’s go-to social media platforms, to research roommates, instructors, and staff. Don’t stop there:
As with summertime preparations for college, health care takes planning. Start by assessing your school’s health care resources. The University of South Florida’s Student Health Services website is an example of what a major university offers. It lists everything from primary care to travel health services.
And don’t leave home without checking medical and dental exams off your to-do list, along with required vaccinations. Those visits will be opportunities to get references on where you could turn for care beyond campus, including specialists in your new college community.
You also might want to:
Our USF admissions advisors are happy to answer your questions about the USF admissions process, so contact us online or by phone at 813-974-3350.