Doing
what students can is seldom enough; most of the time, it’s
about what students cannot do and it is what higher education
is designed to address. It’s at this deficiency that educational
institutions find or detect potential.
Perhaps,
it’s the rationale of making personal statements. Students work on
putting everything they got or acquired in these statements; while
admissions officers look at their qualifications as an indicator for
students’ readiness/aptitude.
However,
students should also be cognisant of the other side of the coin:
while they show what they got, they also give clues as to what they
yet to have. Moving further notches to this realisation,
students too should be cognisant of the higher education’s tools
for addressing ‘what they don’t have,’ or in other terms, their
potentials.
One
such tool to be vigilant of is the coursework. This tool is often
met with a distant glance, as if one could ever avoid doing them.
But for the loyal academic, the tool should be treated as a steady
companion throughout the years of learning and discovery.
If
students’ perception of the tool is mired with negative
connotations, they should work on improving this. For one, it won’t
help them to work something as unsavoury as a coursework. There
would be too much restraint and complaining in this kind of psyche.
In a way, students’ psyche does have the influence to affect their
state of mind, and develop a perception that is neither productive,
nor proactive for their academic experience.
How
could students work on this recommended improvement? Provided below
are some easy steps to aspire and follow:
- Indulge in the coursework topic. Oftentimes, the tool itself is abhorred; yet the same dark cloud doesn’t cover the focus. Hence, students should shift their energies in exploring the topic. At this rate, they may be able to ease out of the course-working process.
- Pick a good course-working partner. Having a partner obscures students’ strong dislike of the tool. In fact, working with a partner may help students find appreciation in the course-working process, as well as the tool itself.
In
final addition to those two, students may look for coursework help.
Students must only be cognisant of qualified sources of help.
Without the term, ‘qualified,’ students cannot afford to
entertain taking the aide. Otherwise, it may prove to be either a
waste of money or time, or probably, both.
1 comment:
Moving further notches for this realisation, students too ought to be cognisant from the greater education’s means of addressing ‘what it normally won't have,’ or in other words, their potentials.
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