Saturday 26 September 2015

Why Students Fail To Graduate With Good Grades

There are many factors that can contribute to a student not graduating with good grade. Many of these factors may be beyond the control of
the student. However, from observation many students fail to graduate with good grades for reasons which can be traced directly to them.
They knowingly or unknowingly plotted their own failure.


Here are 5 common ways many students jeopardize their chances of graduating with good grades;

Poor Start: It is said that the beginning of a thing matters. This is true if you aim to graduate with good grades. It has been observed that students who end up graduating with good grades are the ones that started
putting the needed effort right from their first year. Many think that they have plenty of time, so they use their first year to have “fun” only to
realize how difficult it is to make up for what has been lost already.

Lack of Interest: For one reason or the other many students find themselves admitted to study a particular course they have no interest to study. Many of such students usually develop apathy for academic activities. Some
others take their academics with levity hoping they will change into a more preferable course
later (which may never happen). Only to wish they had been more serious. Even if the course wasn’t what you opted for, take time to find out
what the course is all about and its prospects. You never can tell, you may end up loving it more than your preferred course.
There are some others who have no interest whatsoever in academics. They are in school against their own will. A student once told me,
“I’m here just because my parents want me to be here.” You can hardly put a good amount of effort needed to succeed in something you are
not interested in.

Misplaced Priorities/Poor Time Management:
One major cause of failure is broken or diverted focus. You are in school to study and learn. That means you shouldn’t focus on something
else at the expense of the main reason you are in school. I am not saying you shouldn’t take out time to socialize, have fun, etc. but don’t
indulge in these things at the expense of your study. In higher institutions there are many things that will likely get you distracted. Hence,
the need for you to get your priorities right, set relevant goals and eliminate as much distraction as possible in order to remain focused on your
main objective.

Negative Influence: In campus, you are going to meet the good, the bad and the ugly . Therefore who you choose or allow to choose you as a friend will likely influence you either positively or
negatively. Beware of “friends” who will discourage you from attending lectures and studying.

Poor Study Habits: Since the main objective you are in school is to study and learn, your success will depend on your study habits/pattern.
Studying hard is not enough, you also need to study smart. An effective study habit considers what to study, when to study and how to study.

Successflame...

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