23. Feeling at home | The Odyssey Online
Start writing a post
Student Life

Sleep And 25 Other Things College Students Took For Granted In High School That We Really Shouldn't Have

We never realized just how good we had it...

400
Sleep And 25 Other Things College Students Took For Granted In High School That We Really Shouldn't Have
Hannah Williamson

I remember saying "school is hard" or "I'm so over this" when I was in high school. Little did I know what was ahead of me... College is quite different and has made me realize I took some things for granted in high school.

1. Sleep

I wish I got eight hours of sleep a night like I did in high school. Naps are an essential in college.

2. Home cooked meals

Because of how crazy your schedule can get in college, you'll be lucky if you are even home early enough to actually cook one meal a week. Props to my parents for cooking when they got home from work most nights; I have no energy to do so.

3. Free textbooks

I wish we still got to go check out a textbook for the year in the library rather than renting or buying them.Textbook prices in college are ridiculous to say the least. It still makes no sense to me how we have to drop over $100 on a loose-leaf textbook.

4. Family time

I did spend a lot of time home with family in high school, but I wish I had chosen to spend even more nights at home. Thankfully my parents love Ole Miss football, so I still get to see them pretty often during football season.

5. Seeing friends everyday

College makes it pretty hard to maintain all the high school friendships because everyone is in a new place trying to live a new life. (You'll stay connected to the real ones though.) College friendships are even hard because college campuses are so big and everyone is involved in so many different things, resulting in differing schedules within your friend group.

6. Easy A classes

Yeah... these are non-existent in college if you ask me.

7. Lockers

I remember complaining that we couldn't take our backpack to class because we had to use our locker. Now, I realize how much I took having a locker for granted. When you've got three classes, two meetings, and have to study for exams all in one day on campus, your backpack is as full (and heavy) as it can get.

8. Having classes in one building

Honestly, I don't mind walking from class to class across campus in the spring time, but walking across campus in the winter can be rough. Having all classes in the same building in high school was definitely a blessing.

9. Being able to actually take a sick day without missing anything in class

Miss a day in high school? No biggie. Miss a day in college? Okay. You missed notes the professor probably is not going to upload to Blackboard, a quiz the professor may or may not let you make up, and the review session for your exam next week. Oh, and don't forget you've got to play catch up or you won't understand anything during the next class because they are not going to wait on you or reteach anything.

10. Extra credit opportunities

With the exception of a few really great professors I've had, extra credit has been hard to come by in college. I feel like we always got extra credit in high school to help bring our grade up, but now? Not really. You get what you earn.

11. Field trips

Field trip days in high school were the best because you really only spent a small amount of time doing the 'educational stuff' and then you went out to eat before going back to school at the end of the day. "Field trips" (aka outside of class projects that require you to go somewhere to complete it) still exist in college, but they are on your OWN time... in addition to the million other things you have going on outside of classes.

12. Structured schedules

Yes, you have a set class schedule in college, but each day has a new schedule full of assignments, homework, studying, dinner with friends, meetings for organizations, attempts at having a social life, etc. I liked having the same basic schedule in high school: go to school until 3:50, go to cheer practice until 6, go home, eat dinner, do homework, go to bed (at a reasonable time might I add.)

13. Being able to balance school, clubs, sports, and have a social life 

I was extremely involved in high school and was actually able to maintain it pretty easily. (I mean seriously, I was involved in just about everything.) But in college? It can be quite the challenge to balance the good grades, involvement in organizations, attending sporting events, AND having a social life all at the same time.

14. Not having to worry about not finding a parking spot on campus

Parking in college SUCKS. You'd think with how much money we give the university that we'd be guaranteed a parking spot, but you'd be surprised.

15. Not having to pay a ridiculous amount of money for a parking pass

$300 for a parking pass... are you kidding me...

16. Summer and winter breaks without taking extra courses to get ahead

Although our summer and winter breaks are much longer in college, that's the time that you take courses to get ahead. I decided to knock out both of my required accounting courses in one summer; this was my view every single day. It was a lot of work, but it was worth it in the end. Breaks in high school were strictly for traveling and resting; I want that kind of break back.

17. Having a scheduled time to eat lunch everyday 

Yes, I hated not having the same lunch as my friends in high school. But, that prepared me for college. Now, I don't even know when I'm going to get to eat at all, nonetheless eat WITH friends.

18. Having free time

Free time does not exist in college. If it does, you're probably forgetting something or procrastinating.

19. Not feeling like you always need to be studying

There is ALWAYS something to be working on or studying for (unlike many tests in high school that you really didn't even have to study for.)

20. Not ALWAYS having some sort of homework

Seriously, there is never a day, weekday or weekend, that I go without doing some sort of homework.

21. Spirit weeks/ days serving as distractions from classes

Let's face it: in high school, Friday home games made the school day a joke. Everyone was dressed up and excited for the game, so no one wanted to do any work or pay attention in class. I wish this was the case in college. Yes, students get excited for game day when Friday rolls around, but not every professor loves football as much as we do and lets us off for the day to rest for the game on Saturday.

22. Friday night lights

I miss spending Friday nights on the sidelines cheering on my school's football team. Don't get me wrong; I love Saturday college football. But considering the small amount of sleep I get during the week in college thanks to homework, I'd like to spend some Saturdays just being lazy at home. College game day makes that a difficult task; the entire day is taken up by football.

23. Feeling at home

Now that we're in college, we question where home really is. Is it where we grew up? Is it where our parents are? Is it in our new college town? Or all the above?

24. Free periods

I have yet to have a class where they say "okay, I don't have anything planned for today, so do whatever you want." I miss having free periods in high school to just sit and talk with friends or catch up on homework from another class.

25. Small classes

Since I'm in the honors college, some of my classes are smaller in size, which I absolutely love. But, some of my other classes, like the history and math that everyone has to take regardless of their major, are quite a bit larger.

26. Class parties

Whenever we finished major projects or papers (or it was the seniors last day!!), my classes always had parties to celebrate. It was so nice to spend a class period indulging in cheese dip and pizza while drinking sweet tea (notice how I had to keep it safe driving to school) or soda instead of doing actual school work. This definitely will not happen in college...

Report this Content
This article has not been reviewed by Odyssey HQ and solely reflects the ideas and opinions of the creator.
Student Life

The 5 Painfully True Stages Of Camping Out At The Library

For those long nights that turn into mornings when the struggle is real.

628
woman reading a book while sitting on black leather 3-seat couch
Photo by Seven Shooter on Unsplash

And so it begins.

1. Walk in motivated and ready to rock

Camping out at the library is not for the faint of heart. You need to go in as a warrior. You usually have brought supplies (laptop, chargers, and textbooks) and sustenance (water, snacks, and blanket/sweatpants) since the battle will be for an undetermined length of time. Perhaps it is one assignment or perhaps it's four. You are motivated and prepared; you don’t doubt the assignment(s) will take time, but you know it couldn’t be that long.

Keep Reading...Show less
Student Life

The 14 Stages Of The Last Week Of Class

You need sleep, but also have 13 things due in the span of 4 days.

532
black marker on notebook

December... it's full of finals, due dates, Mariah Carey, and the holidays. It's the worst time of the year, but the best because after finals, you get to not think about classes for a month and catch up on all the sleep you lost throughout the semester. But what's worse than finals week is the last week of classes, when all the due dates you've put off can no longer be put off anymore.

Keep Reading...Show less
Student Life

28 Daily Thoughts of College Students

"I want to thank Google, Wikipedia, and whoever else invented copy and paste. Thank you."

1225
group of people sitting on bench near trees duting daytime

I know every college student has daily thoughts throughout their day. Whether you're walking on campus or attending class, we always have thoughts running a mile a minute through our heads. We may be wondering why we even showed up to class because we'd rather be sleeping, or when the professor announces that we have a test and you have an immediate panic attack.

Keep Reading...Show less
Lifestyle

The Great Christmas Movie Debate

"A Christmas Story" is the star on top of the tree.

2469
The Great Christmas Movie Debate
Mental Floss

One staple of the Christmas season is sitting around the television watching a Christmas movie with family and friends. But of the seemingly hundreds of movies, which one is the star on the tree? Some share stories of Santa to children ("Santa Claus Is Coming to Town"), others want to spread the Christmas joy to adults ("It's a Wonderful Life"), and a select few are made to get laughs ("Elf"). All good movies, but merely ornaments on the Christmas tree of the best movies. What tops the tree is a movie that bridges the gap between these three movies, and makes it a great watch for anyone who chooses to watch it. Enter the timeless Christmas classic, "A Christmas Story." Created in 1983, this movie holds the tradition of capturing both young and old eyes for 24 straight hours on its Christmas Day marathon. It gets the most coverage out of all holiday movies, but the sheer amount of times it's on television does not make it the greatest. Why is it,
then? A Christmas Story does not try to tell the tale of a Christmas miracle or use Christmas magic to move the story. What it does do though is tell the real story of Christmas. It is relatable and brings out the unmatched excitement of children on Christmas in everyone who watches. Every one becomes a child again when they watch "A Christmas Story."

Keep Reading...Show less
student thinking about finals in library
StableDiffusion

As this semester wraps up, students can’t help but be stressed about finals. After all, our GPAs depends on these grades! What student isn’t worrying about their finals right now? It’s “goodbye social life, hello library” time from now until the end of finals week.

1. Finals are weeks away, I’m sure I’ll be ready for them when they come.

Keep Reading...Show less

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Facebook Comments