Kaitlyn
Enjoy your senior year. Improve relationships with your friends while you can, and always keep up with them. No matter how far away they may be, there are always those high school friends to talk to. Don't be afraid to take chances and make memories that will last forever, no matter how far out of your comfort zone you may have to go to make them. Those are the memories that will be conversation starters and allow you to form bonds with new people that you meet. Being willing to try new things and bring yourself out of your shell is what will bring you closer to the people around you once you get to college. But above all else, remember who are and where you come from. Never let others influence you negatively and stand strong in your faith. Keep going after your dreams and make something out of yourself.
jessica
I would have told myself to get my grades up and focus more and do alot of research on what type of student I am and what is the best university choices for me. start of small i would have told myself. Do not worry about the going to school because it has the best football team or it has the bestre party life. Go to a school that suites your needs and that can help you reach your goal.
Scherlee
I would tell myself to make education my first priority, and not be so easily distracted. Looking back I see that the events that happened in my life were minor, unimportant. My focus was misplaced. I would ask myself, "Where do you see yourself in 5, 10, or 20 yrs? Then I would point to myself and say "I'm your future with no education. Life is hard. Give yourself the best chances you can. Make a change. Now."
Jonathan
Start Scholarship applications as soon as you can because it is so hard for upper middle class children to get govermental financial aid. Also be prepared for life changing events and to have a different outlook on life when you enter a college campus, because it is a totally different scene than highschool. There is definitely more independence is college, professors leave you, the student, responsible for your work, they dont keep reminding you when work is due like in highschool, they give you a due date for the assignment and expect you to hand in the assignment on time. Everything on college campuses is so exspensive from food to books, nothing is cheap, so save as much money has you possibly can while you can. Also the sooner you learn to manage a financial budget the better off you will be because that what living the college life is all about. Most people may seem like all they have is fun, but that is the people who don't care about their education. Those who endure hardships in education and work their way through them are the ones who want to suceed and in the end will suceed.
Kyle
I would tell myself to get it all done the first go round and to be more focused.
JENNIFER
I joined the Air Force right out of high school since there was no money for me to go to school. My mother recently graduated college after putting it off for many years to raise myself and my two younger brothers. My father and mother were struggling a little bit with her loans and I did not want that for myself. I learned that the military offered programs to help with education so I signed up as soon as I could. After joining the military I put off school due to conflicting work schedules and deployments to Iraq then decided to get out to pursue my education. Here I am doing that now, along with school loans. The military pays for some but not all of my school. If I could go back in time and talk to myself as a high school senior I would tell myself not to worry about the loan issue and get on with my education. That is exactly what I am doing now 9 years later. I could have already been done with school by now if I did that initially.
Lauren
If I could go back in time and speak to myself as a high school senior, I would advise myself to begin setting up productive study habits in preparation for college. I think study habits are tremendously important to college success. I lacked healthy study habits in high school, and I am convinced that I could have graduated with a much higher high school GPA if I had been more focused. Now that I've set up productive study habits, I'm doing really well in college. I am in a difficult science major and I have a 3.667 GPA! I am also an Honors Program student. Healthy and productive study habits have certainly helped me succeed in college.
Devon
Victor Kiam once said, ?Procrastination is opportunity?s natural assassin?. Now I would like to think I was pretty well prepared for college by the end high school. I partook in a few IB classes, took a concurrent Algebra class with my current college and still managed to pass the exams with enough to points to give me college credit while balancing a fast food job and rehearsal for plays, along with a few other extracurricular activities. However, when I actually think back my classes were fairly tough and I probably would have done better on my exams had I spent more time focusing on actual studies than having a good time with friends and sitting around at home playing games, hoping I would pass that history test the next day. So I would tell myself this, ?You need to stop wasting time for mediocre grades when you know you can do much better. Having a good time will only last so long when an education will you get you farther than any video game ever will. You can never afford to miss a question a test because you never know how many of the other ones you got right.?
Crystal
I would tell myself that I am the one responsible for my education. Do not procrastinate about submitting the fafsa and if it needs changes make them as soon as you know. Otherwise you end up paying tuition cost in full and then are reimbursed the cost later off your finantial aid. So submit the fafsa and scholorships early. Make sure you have all the corect records and information and keep up with it, the government will only give you your pin so many times before they make you get a new one, which takes up more time. If you have questions call the school and ask if they can't answer they will help find someone that does, and if you don't understand say so.
Angela
My goal when I was a high school senior was to join the armed forces as an enlisted soldier, and then get out and go to college, and then join the armed forces as an officer. This track has taken me close to 15 years to complete, so my advice to myself as a high school senior would be to go to college first, skip the enlisted route and join the armed forces as an officer. Other advice I would give myself as a high school senior would be to be more active in school activites and the community, because it makes you a more mature person and it makes you a candidate for numerous scholarships, Winning these scholarships will cut down the financial debt you would undertake as a student who isn't lucky enough to have the finances to pay for the college expenses you will undoubtedly incur.