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Tips and Tricks for Educational Success

How to Survive Your Group Projects

Some Converse College students

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Few words strike fear into college students’ hearts faster than the phrase “group project.” Professors love to assign group projects because they think they’re “collaborative” or “fun” or “preparing students for the real world.” Unfortunately, in the “real world,” we’re motivated by salary– and we can fire employees that don’t live up to their end of the bargain.

All real world comparisons aside, there are some things you can do to survive your upcoming group project.

The Group Project Survival Guide

  1. Divide up as much as you can. Creating a clear division of the workload means your professor can clearly see who did what (and grade accordingly). If you’re doing a slide presentation, have everyone complete their own slides and send them to the group leader to put them together. If you’re doing a comprehensive presentation, let one person cover one topic, another person create a class activity, and have another person make a visual aid.
  2. Don’t do everything yourself. No one likes a control freak– including your professors. If your professor asks your group point-blank who did everything, your team mates will tell her. At the same time, don’t do as little as possible to get out of your project.
  3. Communicate, communicate, communicate. Make sure everyone’s on the same page about your overall concept. Email occasional reminders– but do not over-communicate. Your team members don’t need a neurotic email every three days. Just touch base a week before your project is due and again 36 hours before the due date.
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Filed Under: Adult Education, Online Education Tagged With: College Life, Colleges and Universities, Student

How to Maintain a Great Relationship With Your Professor

Professor

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Your relationship with your professor is incredibly important. A solid professor-student relationship will ensure a better communication system, a better chance for end-of-semester appeals, and maybe even a better grade. Further down the road, a professor can write references or recommendations for your career. He can also be a valuable addition to your network when you graduate, especially if you’re working in his field.

So how can you make sure you’re maintaining the best relationship possible with your professor? Here are some tips.

  1. Don’t try too hard. Buttering up a professor makes it look like you’re only in it for the grade. Don’t suck up– your fellow students will hate you and your professor will see right through you.
  2. Respect their knowledge. They’ve worked really hard to get where they are. You took the SATs and wrote an application essay. No one’s saying you didn’t work hard, but they’ve written and defended theses and are published in their fields. Give them the respect they deserve. If you spot an error, bring it up respectfully. You don’t know everything. Don’t pretend to.
  3. Ask intelligent questions. This proves that you’re paying attention and engaged in the material. Do not beat a dead horse over a much-discussed topic, however.
  4. Read the assigned reading. The easiest way to irritate a professor is by not reading what they assigned.
  5. Participate in discussion. Don’t let a professor pose a question to a deathly silent class. Respond to their questions and help them get a lively discussion going.
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Filed Under: Education, Online Education Tagged With: Faculty, Professor, United States

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