All that glitters is not gold. Similarly, a popular Igbo proverb
says that because all lizards lie on their stomach, you will
never
know the one(s) that have running stomach. I wonder if
lizards
do have running stomach but that’s just by the way.
What’s my point?
OK. There are so many students in schools but then, there
are
students and there are students…
It could also be hard as well as confusing to identify those
who
are really qualified to bear honorable status of student i.e.
those
who are really the serious and those who aren’t.
What spurred me into this direction?
Just the other day, I was chatting with a very worried parent
whose child seem to be unable to graduate from the
university 3
years after the normal duration of his 5 year course. I was
alarmed because I immediately knew why this parent was
going
through…for the past three years, maybe.
I really felt for him because his worriment really showed.
How could I tell him that shitty things like that can
happen…? I
mean, how can I tell him that it was partly his fault that
things
are the way they are now simply because he rather left it
too late
with regards to checking up on his boy’s academic progress
up
until now…? How can I tell him that there is thing called
“carry-
over” which is course/s that his boy must have failed and
must
pass before he can graduate…?
But…
When he said that he is even more confused now than ever
because he is tired of hearing different version of the
almost
impossible mumbo-jumbos his boy was regularly spitting
out, I
knew I just had to tell him.
That was because I sensed it from something he said and
from
the way he unknowingly hinted me that he now suspects his
boy
was an unserious student.
In case you are in the same boat like this parent, or maybe
you
really want to rate your wards, or your friends and/or even
yourself to know if s/he is a serious student or not or to
know
how serious you are with your academics, I will try to help
you
do so by presenting you with some of these pointers with
which
you can base your serious-student evaluation upon.
This is how. A serious student…
Knows his/her Grade Point Average (GPA)
I don’t know any other better method than this with which
to
instantly identify a serious student. In fact, I think it is the
fastest way to identify a serious student on the spot!
Your GPA is the standard used in ranking and rating
students’
performance in college so any serious student is supposed
to be
aware of this very important score.
Granted, it is not always possible for many students to
know the
exact figure but then when you come across any student
who
does not even have any slightest idea what his or her own
GPA
figure is, like this sophomore student that even asked me
“what
is GP?”, take it from me, you are looking at a confirmed
unserious student.
So do you know your GPA? You see?
Knows the nature of the question of any upcoming
examination(s)
This is so true because any serious students must have
done his
or her assignment thoroughly and must have mastered all
the
“tricks” which the lecturer or examiner is going to adopt in
the
exams proper.
A serious student knows that the exam questions are not
going
to be very much different from those of the assignments
and
past question papers and as such s/he have familiarized as
well
as prepared himself very well with them so well for the sake
of
what lies ahead.
S/he is never taken unawares because s/he is always
prepared.
In fact, the real serious students are known to be able to
complete ALL their major school work one or two month’s
ahead before the examination timetable comes out! This is
one
of the reasons why some very sharp students who don’t
see
m to
be reading (that much) still stay tops in the class at the end
of
the day!
But if you come across any fidgeting student who is
confused
and sometimes completely lost (most especially on the
exam
day just some few hours before the exams start), simply
because
s/he does not have any inkling what the exam questions
may
look like, my two cents, s/he is a very very unserious
student.
S/he has failed to plan by preparing early enough and as
such
has failed already unless “help” in the form of exam
malpractice
comes from “somewhere”…
One other thing, a serious student usually has an idea of his
examination score even before the papers are marked once
he is
through with that very paper.
I can almost hear you say, “…and so does the unserious
student
too!” but then I know you know what I am talking about.
Knows where to get help.
A serious student knows where to get help. The help I am
about
here is not “expo” or “runs” which is just the slang terms
used
for examination malpractice in Nigeria.S/he has no need for such distracting things. S/he knows
that
there’s dignity in labor and so s/he will always strive to
achieve
excellence through honest labor.
Most times, you see some students complaining that they
don’t
know what to read or where to get the reading materials
they
think they need.
The serious students don’t usually fall into this group.
And that’s because they already know how, when and
where
they can get easily help. They know when the textbooks
they
need is available in the library. They know the willing
students
and/or lecturers who might be kind enough to give them
such
materials should the need arise.
They know how to make use of the internet to solidify their
knowledge in a particular subject rather than wait for the
lecturer to carry the whole class usually at his ‘slow’ pace.
Encourages others to succeed.
This is usually because any serious student knows that
there is
no pride in mediocrity. You may be tempted to think that
being
the best amongst many who don’t know anything is good
but is
it?
There is no challenge. There is no zeal or need to keeppushing
yourself up to the limit. There is nothing to stimulate the
brain.
No way to measure how good you are getting. Simply put,
there
is no fun in studying anymore.
So to avoid this, a serious student will have no other choice
than
to encourage others to succeed. S/he normally does this
either
by organizing tutorials or discussion class for a group of
people
or even the whole class. He will also tell those students who
are
seeking in truth where to get help.
This will help him kill two birds with one stone. First other
students will succeed and they will have no other choice
than to
attribute this success to him. Secondly, he will have his real
reason to be on his toes, up and doing, knowing now that
backsliding is not an option.
Besides, by teaching others, s/he is able to learn more.
I have heard many students who are often times
complaining
that the serious/intelligent students will not easily want to
disclose the information on how to get through to others
because s/he normally wants to succeed alone.
Inasmuch as I will not want to deny the possibility of
selfishness that could sometimes arise, I still know that
such
students complaining may just be doing so for the sake of
excuse. They might not have even tried enough to get this
help
from the serious ones.
I have this to say to them.
Why are you complaining? Aren’t both of you students or
are
some students more equal than the others now? See my
friend,
stop complaining. Stop waiting for that intelligent student
to
come to you and help you out because most likely, it won’t
happen. S/he is not in school because of you. If you need
help,
go out and seek it. Get off that high horse of yours right
now
and put on the toga of humility and grab the all help you
need
from him now that you still have the time…
Knows the full details of “what’s next?”
Many students don’t have any idea why they are in school.
Some think it is just normal to be in school while many
others
think they are doing their parents some form of favor just
by
doing that.
Many others have come to the conclusion that going to
school
equates to getting a good paying job in the end.
Yes. I don’t know why you are in school but one good advice
I
always give to people is to always try as much as possible to
identify the reason/s why they are in school or why they
want to
go to school in the case of those who are still seeking
admission.
By doing this simple check and evaluation, one can easily
put
him or herself in the path of becoming a serious student by
putting everything in perspective in less than a minute!
This single action will also expose any student who really
wants
to succeed in life (after school) to that very open secret that
school is not all about academics alone. It will also enable
him
to realize that really “all work without play makes ….”
Never takes pride in missing lectures.
When he misses his lectures, he normally feels like he has
let
him down. She knows the importance of lectures. He knows
that
some tricky lecturers normally base their examination
questions
on what they said in class more than what you copied down
in
your notes or what you can find in the textbooks.
Quite unlike his opposite who even rejoices with the news
that
lectures have been postponed or won’t even hold at all, a
serious student never takes pride in missing lectures.
Using Nigerian case as a very good example, school systems
and academic calendar are normally haphazard or
disorganized
because of frequent disruptions mostly from labor strikes.
The unserious student is usually looking forward to such
strikes
so as to ‘relax’ his brain.
Please don’t make me laugh, okay…?
But these strike normally cause the school academic
duration to
be much reduced such that courses that should have ran
for
three months or more are rushed through in two or three
weeks!
Lecturers may have to adjust by telling students not to
cover the
whole study area they would have normally covered had it
been
there was still time…
Hooray! says the unserious student!
This may cause many exams to clash with many students
having
to write more papers than they could normally handle. And
sometimes to ease things off, such papers could be
postponed.
Another pleasing news to the ears of the unserious student
who doesn’t even know or care that useful time is being
wasted.
But all these bother the serious ones. And that’s because s/
he
knows that s/he is the one at the loosing end!
So with all these aforementioned, do you now know how to
recognize an unserious student? Or better still, are you a
serious
student?
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