Advice to First-Year Students from Professors
Our professors are exceptional鈥攖hey鈥檙e experts in their fields, and they truly care about your success as a student. Ask, and most current St. Thomas students will tell you the ability to connect with professors, meet with them one-on-one, and build relationships that last beyond your time on campus鈥攁nd into reference letters and post-graduate career advice 鈥攊s one of the biggest opportunities at this small university.
鈥Your time at university is an exciting opportunity to learn as much as possible about yourself (what you like, what you don鈥檛 like), guided by specialists in many different subjects. Use this opportunity wisely, and don鈥檛 be afraid to try new things.鈥 鈥 Dr. Martin Kutnowski, Fine Arts
鈥Go to class and be engaged. Turn your phone off and put it away. If you don鈥檛 understand something, ask questions. Don鈥檛 get behind because you鈥檙e afraid to speak to professors. It鈥檚 our job to make sure you understand. If you attend classes, we will be happy to help you. Finally, when you鈥檙e assigned a written project, go to the Writing Centre for advice.鈥 鈥 Dr. Amanda DiPaolo, Human Rights
鈥You may not know that we really want to get to know our students. We enjoy mentoring. We love to talk about books and ideas with you. At a small university like 含羞草传媒, professors have open-door policies. If you have a question about an assignment or courses, you should always talk to your professor about it. We鈥檙e here to help.鈥 鈥 Dr. Andrew Moore, Great Books
鈥Have a calendar, and write everything in it. Keep a version of it on your wall. Find a faculty mentor you can go to for academic advice. Finally, divide your days into three parts: 8 hours to study/work, 8 hours to sleep, and 8 hours to live your life.鈥 鈥 Dr. G眉l 脟aliskan, Sociology
鈥It鈥檚 important to take on various challenges (e.g. raising your hand and asking questions in class) while reinforcing your efforts through your favourite activities. The adage, 鈥榖usiness before enjoyment鈥 is relevant here. This will help maintain your academic work while helping to keep balance in your life.鈥 鈥 Dr. David Korotkov, Psychology
鈥Eat regularly, get lots of sleep, have fun, and if at all possible, try not to take a part-time job for more than 10 hours a week. This is your time to study and learn, and you need to be able to concentrate in order to make the most of it.鈥 鈥 Dr. Julia Torrie, History
鈥The most important part of completing any long project is to break it into small, digestible pieces. Any task can be accomplished so long as you make it manageable. Accomplishing things is rewarding in itself. At some point, you find yourself wanting to do things in order to get that sense of accomplishment that comes with completing a task.鈥 鈥 Dr. Shaun Narine, Political Science