College Expectations Essay, Research Paper
Urban legends can be found all throughout our society. One of the reasons why they are so prevalent in our society is because they are focused on topics that play key roles in our lives. There are urban legends that are filled with horror, anxiety, sadness, humor, etc? but most of all they prove to teach valuable lessons. These lessons are known to come across so clearly, simply due to the manner in which they are presented. Legends are always supposed to be told in a convincing manner no mater how suspect their actual plot seems to be. One of the most common as well as appealing types of legends is the college legend. In college legends there are several reoccurring themes that are shared. Several of these themes are related to exams and trying to pass by any means necessary. There are numbers of different legends that involve students trying to out smart their professors. Sometimes they win and sometimes they don’t, which is what creates the entertainment value of these stories. There are many reasons for these legends, one being that going away to school is a huge step in one’s maturation and strive towards independence which can be portrayed accurately through college legends. This creates a great deal of anxiety and doubt that may overcome students attending school away from home. Which is why these legends are so important and why they have been around for so long. Most of all it’s the college freshman who gets hit hardest with these apprehensions and uncertainties. While researching college legends I came across a legend by the name of “flunk me if you can”. This legend tells a tale of a college student taking his final exam. He, like many other students, is having trouble finishing within the allotted time. He had so much trouble in fact that he continued to write for at least five minutes after the professor announced “pencils down”. The teacher, tired of waiting begins to collect his things along with the other student’s papers and begins to leave to room. The student realizes this and rushes over to the teacher to hand his paper in. The teacher in turn refuses to accept the paper due to the fact that the student has violated the academic code by continuing to write after time was called. The student then asked the teacher whether or not he knew his name. The teacher replied no, but that he would after he recorded the student’s failing grade. The student then proceeded to knock the other completed tests out of the teacher’s hands and mixed his exam in with the rest. Immediately after he ran out of the room. So as the story goes, the student ended up getting a B+. This legend plays upon some very important anxieties that almost all college students face, one being the importance of passing final exams, which I believe to be a universal aspect of any student’s life. Another aspect of college that this legend plays on is the factor of time. Time plays a huge role in college, typically it is a matter of balancing your studying and social life, quickly finding out especially as a freshman that no one is going to do it for you. This is why many freshmen have difficulty adjusting to college because they are now entitled with an enormous amount of freedom. Anonymity is another aspect of college that legends play against. The fact is that if you are in a crowded lecture hall of 100 students or more, the odds are that the teacher doesn’t know who you are. This is very unlike the way that most high school settings are. In high school you have the ability to have a personal understanding with your teachers. This is another reason why I found this legend to be so appealing to college freshman. Also for most freshman or for that matter any student there is a great sense of powerlessness when faced with academic regulations and unyielding professors. There are several other legends that I came across over the Internet that deal with exams and students struggle with budgeting time. One legend involved a student taking his final exam and it turns out that he only knew the answer to one of the two questions that he had to respond to. So,
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