The Key to Successful Course Registration
Orientation
During your orientation to campus, you will have a number of activities
that culminate in your registering for fall term classes. The sessions,
resources, and experiences are designed to help you make satisfying decisions
about how to use your first term and to help you begin to consider the larger
issues involved in planning your degree.
The first step in this process toward registration actually begins right
now with this publication and the enclosed materials.
Before you arrive on campus
* Carefully complete the questionnaire and return it as soon
as possible to ensure that your advisor is able to read it prior to your
first meeting. Before you send it off, however, look over the pattern
of your answers and consider where your principal interests and enthusiasms
lie and with what areas of knowledge you have had little contact so far.
These may well be areas to consider when you begin to sort through course
options.
* Read this booklet carefully to acquire an overview of the
College, degree requirements, educational opportunities and resources that
are going to be available to you as an LS&A student.
* Browse through the Course Guide for courses
or departments that match your interests and desired skills. Make a list
of courses that you think might be interesting or useful to take at some
point in your academic career. This should be a long list, not a list just
of the courses you want to take this Fall.
* Submit your writing portfolio well in advance of orientation.
Once on campus
One of your first orientation activities related to academic concerns will
be the taking of a variety of placement tests (math,
chemistry, and/or language placement tests). It is important that you
take those tests seriously so that the measurement of your preparation
in those areas will be accurate. Your academic advisor will use those results
in helping you select courses later.
On your second day of orientation, in the afternoon, you will meet
with your academic advisor in a small group setting. At this point
you will be introduced to the LS&A degree requirements as well as basic
College policies and procedures. You will also begin to learn about the
nature of academic advising in the college setting - how to use your academic
advisor as your educational mentor and guide through your first years on
campus.
You will next have an individual appointment with your academic advisor
for a general discussion of your college expectations, goals, interests,
and level of preparation. At this meeting you also will learn the results
of the various placement tests you have taken and evaluate any Advanced
Placement test results you have. You will not select courses at this time.
But it is important to begin to establish a working relationship with your
advisor; the better that person knows you, the more specific and helpful
he/she can be.
Later that afternoon you will meet with several LS&A academic
peer advisors. This small group discussion will allow you
an opportunity to learn about resources, strategies, and techniques which
tend to help make your first term very successful. It is also an opportunity
for you to ask any questions about all those things that make college different
from high school - what classes are like, academic work loads, what instructors
expect from their students, etc.In the evening after you talk with
your advisor, you will consult with the peer academic advisors
while you make up a list of 8 to 10 courses from which you will select your
final Fall elections. The Peer Advisors are experienced students who can
help you find interesting classes to fit your needs and expectations, can
describe what it is like to be a successful student in LS&A, and can
help you identify the primary things you need to remember when you put together
your first schedule.
Also that evening, peer advisors representing the Living/Learning Program
[Lloyd Scholars, Women in Science and Engineering (WISE), the 21st Century
Program, Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP), and Comprehensive
Studies Program (CSP)] will be available for you to consult. If you belong
to any of those programs, you will need to check in with the appropriate
peer advisor. They will provide information on special courses and course
sections which are being held for you, and they will fill you in on how
to register for those special classes.
A lot of thought should go into the list of courses you compile with the
help of the peer advisor. They should all be courses that you are interested
in and which you would like to take. When you finally register, you may
find that some courses on your list are closed, conflict with another course
you really want to take, or require some additional preparation. Should
that happen, you want to be in a position to substitute another course that
is equally satisfying. Your list should also include a wide range of courses.
This is an ideal time to explore new subject areas or pursue topics that
particularly fascinate you. We suggest that you also look closely at the
First-Year Seminars (The First-Year Seminar brochure
was included in the mailing packet.) and other special courses which are
offered for new students.
The next morning, you will meet again with your academic advisor to
make a final selection of Fall classes and alternate choices before you
actually register. Your advisor is there to guide you as you make your
choices, not to choose your classes for you. Following your session
with your advisor, you will officially register for the courses you and
your advisor have selected. Your peer advisor will meet you in the registration
area to assist you should you have questions or need assistance during this
process.
It is important to consult with your academic advisor on a regular basis
as the term goes on, to let him/her know how classes are going, to discuss
your experiences in class and on campus, and to begin sorting out all the
helpful resources and opportunities on campus which can make your academic
career here the best possible. You owe it to yourself to learn all the options
so that your decisions can be made in your best interests.
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