? "Our social association department informed us to go to the sentry box next to the canteen to be on duty tomorrow morning."
? "You go to sleep first, leave a door for me, and the leader of the propaganda department of our student union will let us upload an activity push now."
......
It's almost eleven o'clock when I return to the dormitory from the library. The dormitory door was locked and no one came back.
Fortunately, I brought the key and I skillfully opened the lock. Wechat rang, "All personnel will go to the incubation base for training tomorrow afternoon." A message from the founding minister.
Good or bad day, I sit at my desk and think, what are college students busy with?
We run around every day.
Dormitories, canteens and classrooms are all necessary. Of course, except those students who skip classes one after another to find someone to answer, stay up late in bars every day and eat out every day, these three places are enough as the life framework for most students.
Societies, student unions, community organizations, various lectures and competitions (including basketball competitions, singing competitions, video production competitions, English corner competitions, Internet? Competition, etc. ), part-time job (including part-time job on campus, handing out leaflets in dormitory, taking express delivery, buying meals in canteen, part-time job off campus, cashier in hotel, pulling students into off-campus cram school, invigilating the test center for one day, etc.). ), practical activities (making a historical outline, choosing topics of interest for group research, making investigation reports, etc. ), social activities (group building organized by classes or colleges or schools, reading promotion meetings) can all be taken as branches under the framework of college students' life. It is not necessary, it is arranged according to your own interests and time. If you are busy, you can join 10 at one time or not at all, depending on yourself.
So many complicated things make up our college life. Back to the beginning, the question of what college students are busy with may have been answered, which is nothing more than one or several examples above.
So busy, I finally finished my day's work or study, and went back to the dormitory to get ready to wash and sleep.
Roommate A began to complain about the formalism and bureaucracy of a certain club, and asked for a regular meeting every Monday, where everyone was present and the five-minute business took two hours. Roommate B began to complain that he was on duty at the designated post and didn't get exercise. He sat and played with his mobile phone for 2 hours, and occasionally someone came to register visitors. Roommate C began to complain that a minister was unkind and asked members to gather in a classroom at noon 1 to speak and assign tasks. As a result, I was dizzy and didn't sleep in class in the afternoon, and the minister's speech had no substance. Roommate D began to complain that the newly-found campus part-time job ran all day, and the number of WeChat steps broke by nearly 30,000, but the daily salary was pitiful. Everyone teased and comforted each other and finally came down to the same theme. College life is not what I imagined. I wonder what it means to run around all day. I don't know what I learned in college.
Yesterday, after calculus class in the classroom, I had a heated discussion with my friend sitting next to me on an advanced math problem. In the end, the two failed to reach an agreed answer and went to ask the teacher together. After the teacher answered enthusiastically, we were suddenly enlightened.
On the way back to the dormitory, she suddenly said, "I really like that feeling."
"What?" I'm a little dumbfounded.
"It is the feeling of discussing math problems with you and asking the teacher questions. It's like, I just studied by myself in the evening of senior three and discussed the college entrance examination with my classmates. Although I was very tired at that time, I was very busy and full. We all work for the same goal. Although I often practice exams every day, I have gained a lot of knowledge. I always feel that I am not so empty now, but I have fallen to the ground. I really miss high school! " Finally, she sighed deeply. In fact, she is not the only one who heard similar words.
? This illustration shows my records with my friends and my classmates' circle of friends.
Classmate a
Classmate b
Classmate c
Everyone's discussion in the class group of senior three.
This picture shows the group news and group news in the community organization I added.
So, let's go back to the second more important and divergent issue in the topic. What do you study in college?
Whether you are a college student or a parent, or you have graduated and have not been a parent, you should have thought about this question before, now or in the future.
It happened that a good friend sent me an article in the evening-"What to Learn in University", which was included in the letter 132 of Wu Jun's Letter from Silicon Valley. During the ten minutes between classes, I made a general framework while listening. The content can be summarized as follows: University study is for life, not for majors. College students need to cultivate the following four basic abilities or habits: 1. Put it into action. Communication expression 3. Friendly and friendly 4. Summing up and writing should be logical and reasonable.
? This illustration is a simple note I wrote when I listened to the article 10 minutes between classes.
In high school, we often asked, "Will you pass this exam?" The goal is to focus on learning, or the only center. In college, we often think, "Will this job be used?" We don't have exactly the same big goal, and we have learned a lot of seemingly useless professional things. Here, I would like to call it knowledge, skills, methods and common sense.
Most students' psychological stage is still in the high school stage, and they miss the arranged life, the homework which is detailed to which page and topic every day, and the struggle time with clear goals-to get into a good university, and nothing else needs to be taken care of or worried about.
University is the golden stage of learning. College students have flexible time, strong memory and understanding, and strong plasticity. 18-22 years old is the best learning period, and the cost of trial and error is the lowest. Therefore, I encourage you, whether you join the student organization or not, to follow the advice of outstanding seniors and sisters, supplemented by your own judgment. I hope we are all doing what we feel meaningful and like.
We study for life. Many things seem useless, but they are actually very training. In trying different things, you may accidentally discover your interests and talents, thus deciding your future employment direction.
Four years is fast. Is it a postgraduate entrance examination or a job after graduation? There is no right or wrong choice, and there are many factors behind it Individual differences are too great for us to generalize.
What are college students busy with and studying? What is behind college students' busyness and study?
As a freshman, I can't give a perfect answer from a high angle. The above only puts forward some of my views, hoping to inspire you. I will explore the rest of the road with you.