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State University of Iowa Code for Coeds, 1962-1968
Page 12
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Learning Your Lines Learning your lines is essential in any production. Your education is the purpose for your college life, just as the script determines the action of the play. You won't have to interpret your role without assistance, for you will have a faculty adviser acting as your director. He will be your guide and source of information throughout your college career, and especially during the first few weeks of your run. He will help you plan your schedule before registration, clear up confusing terms like "hours," "core course," an "electives," and advise you on the way to get the most from your four years at Iowa. A good start requires a definite program for yourself and plenty of application. A total of thirty to thirty-five hours is usually suggested as the amount of time you should spend studying each week, assuming that you are carrying the normal freshman load of fourteen to sixteen hours of credit per semester. This implies that you will spend about two hours in preparation for each hour spent in class. These hours will probably be filled with core requirements such as mathematics, Rhetoric, natural and social sciences, literature, foreign languages, and historical and cultural courses. After you have registered you should purchase and become acquainted with your textbooks. Although your instructors will announce the texts required for the courses at a later date, the local bookstores have complete course lists on hand and will give you information on the books you need. Before classes start, you'll be on your way to better learning if you set up a regular study schedule. By budgeting each day, you'll find that there's time in your schedule for studying, dates, and extracurricular activities. Without such a schedule, these other activities may interfere with your 12
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Learning Your Lines Learning your lines is essential in any production. Your education is the purpose for your college life, just as the script determines the action of the play. You won't have to interpret your role without assistance, for you will have a faculty adviser acting as your director. He will be your guide and source of information throughout your college career, and especially during the first few weeks of your run. He will help you plan your schedule before registration, clear up confusing terms like "hours," "core course," an "electives," and advise you on the way to get the most from your four years at Iowa. A good start requires a definite program for yourself and plenty of application. A total of thirty to thirty-five hours is usually suggested as the amount of time you should spend studying each week, assuming that you are carrying the normal freshman load of fourteen to sixteen hours of credit per semester. This implies that you will spend about two hours in preparation for each hour spent in class. These hours will probably be filled with core requirements such as mathematics, Rhetoric, natural and social sciences, literature, foreign languages, and historical and cultural courses. After you have registered you should purchase and become acquainted with your textbooks. Although your instructors will announce the texts required for the courses at a later date, the local bookstores have complete course lists on hand and will give you information on the books you need. Before classes start, you'll be on your way to better learning if you set up a regular study schedule. By budgeting each day, you'll find that there's time in your schedule for studying, dates, and extracurricular activities. Without such a schedule, these other activities may interfere with your 12
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