Get a bit close, teachers don't bite by Corrine
Corrineof Royal Palm Beach's entry into Varsity Tutor's March 2019 scholarship contest
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Get a bit close, teachers don't bite by Corrine - March 2019 Scholarship Essay
Leading the next freshman students around their new school, is already a tuff one for them to process. The new friends they will make, tough reality, and definitely stricter teachers are something they haven’t expected. They’re already scared half to death by our grown faces and fast-changing bodies, what information could you tell them, that wouldn’t be even scarier? However, not to fear, because telling them about making close relationships with their teachers and counselors is the best advice I could give.
Senior year, or for me, a combination of junior and senior year, should never be taken as the best year or even the easiest. Let's be honest, it’s not. College applications, college interviews, part-time jobs, finding loans, finding scholarships, and AP tests that have now struck a chord with you. What else is the toughest part? Asking teachers to develop a recommendation letter that has to develop every important fact about you and your extracurriculars, sports, grades, drive, stamina, and attitude. Teachers’ need to know and understand you. How are you supposed to get recommendation letters if you don’t form a close bond with them? Forming this close bond is necessary, and it does a lot more than just recommendation letters. A lot of teacher’s care about their students day in and day out. Forming a close bond can forever leave a teacher with gratefulness that you were their student. These teachers are more willing to help tutor you and help you in college. They are willing to lend that hand to a student who cared about their education.
Forming a close bond with a college counselor can have many benefits too. To daily problems or helping pick a college, counselors can offer a lot of support. With the bad days and you need someone to talk to, they are there to help. Allowing yourself to become close, can lead to helpful advice. The counselor would become more informed about what is there to help you and the things you should not do.
Without forming these close bonds, you can leave yourself stuck in the mess of high school, senior year. Avoid these problems, and create a deeper, meaning relationship with your teachers and college counselors, because, in the end, they just want to see you prosper.