College Professor First Impressions On the First Day of Class

Now that I’m in my seventh semester of college, I have been to a lot of first days of class and been taught by many different teachers. As I was sitting in class on Monday, waiting for my professor to show up, I began thinking about what kind of professor would be schooling me on politics this semester. I didn’t even know if it would be a professor, doctor, first year teacher or anything. Would he be strict, funny, interesting, dry or boring?

I think a teacher’s first impression on the first day of class is very important, from a student’s perspective. Every teacher has their own style of teaching, and the first day of class, for me anyways, is really just an hour of analyzing the teacher and making sure this is a class that 1) I can get an A in, 2) I can enjoy, at least a little bit and, 3) taught by a teacher that I will get along with and make me want to show up for class.

The professor in Transformers 2 makes a great first impression on his class, especially after Sam has his little freak out

First impressions can be deceiving, however. Sometimes teachers want to come off as super strict on the first day so all the slackers will drop the class. Some come off as super sweet so students will like them. Some come off as very knowledgeable, even bragging about their job history or past. Some just don’t give a shit, and give you a lecture on not caring about texting in class, using a laptop or even showing up to class.

I’ve found that first impressions can either set the tone for the rest of the semester, or can be totally misleading. I had an English class freshman year where the teacher came off as very strict, with a no fun type of attitude. I immediately dropped the class and picked up a different one. Later on in the semester, I talked to a friend who had stayed in the class. He told me about how easy the class was and how nice the teacher was, accepting late homework, showing movies and getting to know the students. I was astonished, because the English class that I had picked up was actually pretty difficult.

I’ve also learned that getting to know teachers can really help you out in the end, especially when you get your final grade. Now, I email each of my professors and ask about the textbooks before class begins each semester. My emails are professional and polite, and I have a professional signature at the end of my email, with a link to my LinkedIn account. This gives me a way to not only see how professional my professors are, in email at least, but they also might remember my name when class starts AND, depending on how they end their emails, whether they are a professor or not and if they liked to be called by first name, Mr., Ms., etc.

First impressions can mean everything to students, but don’t take them for granted. Every teacher has their own style of presenting on the first day, sometimes it give you an idea of how the class is going to be taught, and sometimes it tells you nothing at all.

Have any interesting first impression experiences, comments or questions? Feel free to leave them below!

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Nontraditional Networking

We’ve all been taught that networking is crucial for a number of reasons. Networking can lead to jobs and internships, business opportunities and friendships. I have really fallen in love with networking over the past year, especially since I joined Delta Sigma Pi, the professional business fraternity at my university. I have come to realize that the best way to network is to simply ALWAYS be networking.

This means networking at work, at lunch, on campus, in class, when doing errands and even when you’re at a bar or club. If you are an outgoing person, you are most likely already networking anyways. But it doesn’t hurt to remind yourself, especially if you’re not so outgoing, of the power of networking and how you should be networking with everyone you talk to.

Today I’m going to talk about a couple nontraditional networking ideas:

Conference Crashing

I learned about conference crashing from entrepreneur Andy Drish, ironically, at a leadership conference in California. I haven’t been to many conferences in my lifetime, mostly because I haven’t lived in the right places (Anchorage, Alaska and Reno). If I lived somewhere else, however, I would take advantage of Andy’s genius strategy:

If there’s a conference, speaker or summit that you would like to attend but don’t have the money, use your status as a student to your advantage. Find out who’s setting up the conference and get into contact with them. Tell them you’re a broke college student but would really like to attend the conference, and you are willing to volunteer your time to help out with anything if you can attend or watch some or all of the speakers.

Andy said him and his friends have done this a couple of times. One time, they were assigned volunteer work backstage at a leadership conference, helping to get the speakers and sound equipment ready. They got about 20 minutes of one-on-one backstage time with each speaker before they presented! The speakers were willing to talk to them and they asked questions that no one else at the conference could ask! No doubt, the speakers remembered Andy and I’m sure Andy followed up and turned the speakers into valuable contacts. Now that’s how you network!

Switch Roles

This morning, a friend and I did some more nontraditional networking. We decided to “crash” an event put on by the Economic Development Authority of Western Nevada (EDAWN). This event was titled “Connecting Northern Nevada’s Companies to Its Largest Skilled Workforce Pool,” and was for businesses to learn about better ways to hire interns and graduates. We were the only students there, but not only did we get to attend the event at the discounted member rate, we also met a bunch of employers that we turned into contacts. There were representatives from all the universities in Northern Nevada as well as local business owners and HR reps. I gave my resume out and traded business cards with numerous professionals that should be able to help me get a job or internship in the near future. We were also invited to an exclusive networking event for the real estate industry at a club downtown, just because we were students! It was actually pretty fun and I don’t think the contacts we met today will forget us anytime soon.

Have any other nontraditional networking ideas, comments or questions? Please share them below!

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