12 - Relationships
What your instructors expect from you:
Be prepared and on time
Remain for the entire class
Do the assigned work
Listen and participate
Think critically about the material
Persist even when learning is difficult
Be honest, open, and sincere
Be self-motivated
What you can expect from your instructors:
Grading you fairly
Providing meaningful feedback
Being organized, prepared, and enthusiastic
Being accessible
What you can expect from your peer leader:
Work as co-instructors or student mentors
Selected because they:
Have good academic records
Have strong leadership abilities
Want to help first-year students be successful
Most instructors are required to keep office hours
Make an appointment if you need help with a difficult topic or to discuss a problem
Instructors who know you well may write you letters of reference when applying to graduate school or for a job
Understanding academic freedom:
Virtually unlimited freedom of speech and inquiry, as long as human lives, rights, and privacy are not violated
Also extends to students
Handling a conflict with an instructor:
Can ask for a meeting to discuss the problem
Can go up the administrative ladder if instructor refuses
Maintain family relationships throughout your college years
Marriage and parenting during college:
They can coexist but not easily
You need to become an expert at time management
Take time for your partner and family
Plan carefully as you schedule work and classes
Relationships with your parents:
They will change
Communicate with your parents, but make your own decisions
Be aware of their concerns
Remember, parents generally mean well
If needed, seek help from your campus’s counseling center or from a chaplain
Shift in environment and daily pattern
Varying speeds of adjustment
Tips for transitions:
Don’t let go of home all at once
Reach out slowly
Keep in mind that you are not the only new person at college.
Roommates:
Must be able to live together comfortably
Friends don’t always make the best roommates
Establish rights and responsibilities in writing
Talk out problems promptly and directly
Talk to the residence hall adviser if problems persist
If things do not improve, insist on a change
Romantic relationships/marriage:
Studies show the younger you are when you marry, the lower your odds of enjoying a successful marriage
It’s important not to marry before both you and your partner are certain of who you are and what you want
End romantic relationships cleanly and calmly
Explain your feelings, and talk them out
Take the high road
Let some time pass
Be open to emotional support
Visit your counselor or chaplain if necessary
Avoid involvement with someone who is in a “power relationship” with you
Creates opportunities for abuses of power and/or sexual harassment
It’s harder to heal from a breakup with a coworker
Most survivors are women, although everyone is at risk
The attacker is often someone the survivor knows
Many assaults go unreported
Assaults are linked to alcohol use
Campus Save Act and Clery Act of 1990
Sexual assault causes traumatic effects
Steps to help a person who has experienced a sexual assault:
Remain empathetic and nonjudgmental
Keep information private; ensure the survivor’s confidentiality
Listen
Talk with the survivor about how to proceed; discuss options
Seek out advice from a professional
Stay in touch; follow up to see if the survivor is getting help
Match the seriousness of your message to your communication medium
Online isn’t always more efficient
Presume that your posts are public
Remember that your posts are permanent
Create drafts
Protect yourself and your online identity
What your instructors expect from you:
Be prepared and on time
Remain for the entire class
Do the assigned work
Listen and participate
Think critically about the material
Persist even when learning is difficult
Be honest, open, and sincere
Be self-motivated
What you can expect from your instructors:
Grading you fairly
Providing meaningful feedback
Being organized, prepared, and enthusiastic
Being accessible
What you can expect from your peer leader:
Work as co-instructors or student mentors
Selected because they:
Have good academic records
Have strong leadership abilities
Want to help first-year students be successful
Most instructors are required to keep office hours
Make an appointment if you need help with a difficult topic or to discuss a problem
Instructors who know you well may write you letters of reference when applying to graduate school or for a job
Understanding academic freedom:
Virtually unlimited freedom of speech and inquiry, as long as human lives, rights, and privacy are not violated
Also extends to students
Handling a conflict with an instructor:
Can ask for a meeting to discuss the problem
Can go up the administrative ladder if instructor refuses
Maintain family relationships throughout your college years
Marriage and parenting during college:
They can coexist but not easily
You need to become an expert at time management
Take time for your partner and family
Plan carefully as you schedule work and classes
Relationships with your parents:
They will change
Communicate with your parents, but make your own decisions
Be aware of their concerns
Remember, parents generally mean well
If needed, seek help from your campus’s counseling center or from a chaplain
Shift in environment and daily pattern
Varying speeds of adjustment
Tips for transitions:
Don’t let go of home all at once
Reach out slowly
Keep in mind that you are not the only new person at college.
Roommates:
Must be able to live together comfortably
Friends don’t always make the best roommates
Establish rights and responsibilities in writing
Talk out problems promptly and directly
Talk to the residence hall adviser if problems persist
If things do not improve, insist on a change
Romantic relationships/marriage:
Studies show the younger you are when you marry, the lower your odds of enjoying a successful marriage
It’s important not to marry before both you and your partner are certain of who you are and what you want
End romantic relationships cleanly and calmly
Explain your feelings, and talk them out
Take the high road
Let some time pass
Be open to emotional support
Visit your counselor or chaplain if necessary
Avoid involvement with someone who is in a “power relationship” with you
Creates opportunities for abuses of power and/or sexual harassment
It’s harder to heal from a breakup with a coworker
Most survivors are women, although everyone is at risk
The attacker is often someone the survivor knows
Many assaults go unreported
Assaults are linked to alcohol use
Campus Save Act and Clery Act of 1990
Sexual assault causes traumatic effects
Steps to help a person who has experienced a sexual assault:
Remain empathetic and nonjudgmental
Keep information private; ensure the survivor’s confidentiality
Listen
Talk with the survivor about how to proceed; discuss options
Seek out advice from a professional
Stay in touch; follow up to see if the survivor is getting help
Match the seriousness of your message to your communication medium
Online isn’t always more efficient
Presume that your posts are public
Remember that your posts are permanent
Create drafts
Protect yourself and your online identity