Ludwig's story-telling skills are so crazy this felt super fluid
@pittaaaabread3 жыл бұрын
TRUE As much as I don't like some of his new content his story telling is SSS+ level. He really has such a fluid way of talking even during the live stream without any edits he still tells story really well.
@Dewkify3 жыл бұрын
partially in credit due to the editing, but agreed
@nasansikid4803 жыл бұрын
do you think he uses bullet points, or just freestyling?
@whippersnapper76323 жыл бұрын
Well he did take an online public speaking class
@pmdoublet19483 жыл бұрын
indeed
@ProdSyn3 жыл бұрын
I leave for college tmr morning epic
@attaxolotl3 жыл бұрын
good luck
@foofkemusic22913 жыл бұрын
You’re Syn Beats Hi! 👋
@parry1113 жыл бұрын
Good luck man, hope you have a good time :>
@norsecosmos3 жыл бұрын
I believe in ya. Hot tip: develop a routine for when to get the homework done Edit: hadn’t gotten to the part in the vid where lud said this lol
@johnathandagan3 жыл бұрын
I'm leaving for college on Friday, gl!
@sugarr_coat3 жыл бұрын
That was perfect timing because we're all going to college after speedrunning high-school in the pandemic, I had no idea what we're doing
@Lythwynn3 жыл бұрын
so true and real
@goaltf43 жыл бұрын
bro literally last year felt like i had less than half a semester of learning, literally woulda flunked all finials if i hadn’t crunched, and i always get a/bs
@EvanLaFrance3 жыл бұрын
I hope we arent f*cked lol
@uzumakilol12882 жыл бұрын
@@goaltf4 Corona literally got me A* in predicted grades for my A levels, which i otherwise would have gotten a C for.
@regann72272 жыл бұрын
Me too bro
@pj47333 жыл бұрын
College also doesn’t tell you that professors determine your GPA, it takes one ego professor to turn your 4.0 GPA to a 3.2 because they don’t give As and their grading is harsh
@AbsoPS3 жыл бұрын
Sad but so true
@851995STARGATE3 жыл бұрын
Crazy how true this is, or They choose the scale of something like a 95-100 to be an A instead of a 91-100 so it shifts the grading. Requires you to check the syllabus every time
@MacKensBee3 жыл бұрын
true, all of my classes have scales without plus or minuses, except for my physics class. And I got an A- and now my GPA is a 3.99 and I am graduating in the spring. Good thing is GPA doesn't really matter.
@851995STARGATE3 жыл бұрын
@@MacKensBee Depending on your degree it does matter for some higher end employers
@duck828020 күн бұрын
Who cares tho as long as you get the degree
@Hephaestus_God3 жыл бұрын
My tip (as a STEM): Don't believe Rate my professor at a glance. First off, the only people who rate professors are the ones who failed the class or the ones who got 99s and breezed by...you get an absurd bias of hate + love for the person. Even if you see a 4.0 professor you can take them and end up hating them and failing. It is better to just ask people in your degree if they have taken a class and what professor to take. Typically they will be the average and you will get a better representation/opinion of the prof. Exception: There are like 100 raters and the rating is 4.0.. at that point just believe it
@LivelyEngineer3 жыл бұрын
Appreciate the advice- whats your major?
@Hephaestus_God3 жыл бұрын
@@LivelyEngineer Mechanical Engineering
@gandangamberify3 жыл бұрын
One thing I learned from Ratemyprofessor is to pay attention between the lines. It doesnt matter so much if the student loved or hated the professor but why. There are a bunch of review like "Shes the best, her powerpoints are useless but the tests are all based on the book and really easy" or "I fucking hate her, we take notes everyday and she never used the book" Both reviews basically gives you hints on what you should pay attention to and how the teachers teach or what they find important
@diezels96743 жыл бұрын
Thats crazy but hush 🥸 stem student :laughing:
@SpotlightInSpace3 жыл бұрын
I am applying this year, I'll keep this in mind for sure
@alexanderstemple6663 жыл бұрын
The collection of human knowledge: - What they tell you about college - What NO ONE tells you about college
@Arthur-xr5qf3 жыл бұрын
Not really, since both are in the set "about college".
@user-jc2jp7rd9f3 жыл бұрын
@@Arthur-xr5qf that's what they want you to think
@jacobgrant62852 жыл бұрын
@@Arthur-xr5qf yeah but one is what they do tell u and the other is what they dont
@leftisbest66693 жыл бұрын
As a soon to be senior, he is 100% correct on joining a club, it's the holy grail of making friends and becoming a somebody in university.
@fullmetalpwn3 жыл бұрын
I had never considered it before, but literally all of the friends I made in college I made through clubs (even the ones who had the same degree as me) I was in a Tabletop Game Club (mainly Magic and D&D) and a Pokemon club and a Smash club
@capp122493 жыл бұрын
me who is graduating in April without ever having joined a club:
@bakicci3 жыл бұрын
Or take a language class! Cuz theyre forced to talk to you
@leftisbest66693 жыл бұрын
@@bakicci Nah take an AP high school language class so you don't have to take it in college. EASY money saver!
@SofiaAgnew Жыл бұрын
It’s easy to just make friends with people in your classes, I’m too lazy for a club and do extra work for it lmao I’m already struggling to finish my essays as is
@tfoles9gaming6313 жыл бұрын
As someone who just graduated, I think the BIGGEST tip Ludwig missed is to take advantage of all the free shit your school provides you. Grabbing the granola bar and the fruit on the table even if you’re not hungry at the time; making a cup of coffee rather than going to starbucks and even taking the corny school pride shirt/cups/ lanyards etc. that they’re handing out will save you so much more money than you’d think over time
@luminescentlion3 жыл бұрын
Electrical Engineering Major here, wasn't expecting to get attacked like this not gonna lie.
@charlessandoz25223 жыл бұрын
It sounds like it’s coming from a place of jealousy or anger Which made me laugh since I’m in mechanical
@tylerhenry72593 жыл бұрын
Same here as a Biomedical Engineering major maybe we should get the STEM community to cancel Ludwig
@tabemash05943 жыл бұрын
Pixie wrangler
@OreOmod3 жыл бұрын
CS major...cause yeah I'm Indian
@sola_a3 жыл бұрын
Industrial Engineering major, can I join the crusade too?
@CommandoBanano3 жыл бұрын
I'm old and finishing my Ph.D. this term, what I have learned in the last 7 years of higher education are 5 major things. 1. Grades do not matter too much, as long as you maintain a 3.0 average GPA most scholarships will float through and you will be okay. 2. High school is over, if you are attending school hours away at least from your hometown move on from most of those people from high school. It will save you tons of emotional distress, as well as Ludwig, put it perfectly that you can "become a new person". 100% valid 3. Grades are not 100% true to finding a career after university. Networking and becoming work assistants under your professors or just become generally on good paths with them help a metric ton. 4. If affording school is hard, then work for the school. Universities are always looking for work at the beginning term for different offices or positions on-campus. These jobs can help pay for your tuition in parts if not full. 5. Don't stress too much, go to a party, relax, and breathe. You will burn out if you only fill yourself with 4-5 organizations while not having some reliving factor. (My significant other did resident assistant, university ambassadors, sorority, marching band, honor program, and ACS for her STEM major while studying for her MCAT. Her junior year was filled with constant breakdowns and stress. The alleviator we found for her was fitness) Tip: Any class before 9am is a trap don't do it, unless you have to.
@biancadesousa17 күн бұрын
Knew someone in college who has shitty grades and literally did the minimum effort he could for exams and assignments. He had personal connections in his industry though and now only a few years in he's making like 100k a year. Networking is the ONLY thing that matters after college, no one cares how high your grades were if you didn't network. If you aren't born with these advantages and have connections to these people then you have to make them which likely means a lot of free internships unfortunately hoping one of them gets you a job after
@brims963 жыл бұрын
I’m getting a PhD and have taught several college classes, so I’ve been both student and professor and seen both sides. Can confirm Lud’s advice was really good! One unfortunate piece of insider info is that professors, particularly at big schools, are NOT hired to teach. Their focus is bringing in grant money through research. Most professors are kind and want to help you, but they just don’t have the time (especially if they have thousands of students a semester). Learning how to teach yourself is a useful skill both in college and beyond.
@BlitzyRPG3 жыл бұрын
That said, it's still very important to attend classes. They are a way to make sure you learn something throughout the semester. If you trust your self-teaching abilities too much, you might start studying too late to have the desired grades. Attending classes is important!
@ariseira_3 жыл бұрын
This is super important to know!
@tinycar1233 жыл бұрын
In Australia my STEM degree (civil engineering) requires you to get a grade above 40% to pass each the course which is insanely low. My building are going to be a pile of rubble with grades that low
@computerbutter81243 жыл бұрын
Ayy Civ gang
@k9gao3 жыл бұрын
Holy shit, that last tip he gave was spot on and really resonated with me. I started dating this girl in senior year of high school, and decided to stick with her through at least a bit of college. We went to different colleges for the first three years of college, and I really limited myself in terms of living life because of it. Would've loved to date around a bit and learn the ins and outs of dating, and maybe do some shit that I would've liked to do on my own. In my junior year of college, she transferred to my college and midway through the year, I got into a car accident. Was in a coma for three weeks and rehab for 3 months afterwards, during which she would come visit me every week in the hospital. I was so extremely grateful for her being by my side all that time, and fell into love with her stronger than all the years in our relationship prior. However, she had already begun falling out of love with me, and we broke up 3 months after I was discharged from the hospital. For the entire year after the breakup, I was hopelessly lost and without direction because my life had been centered around her for the past few years. I had not joined a club on campus, so I didn't really have a group of people to turn to. I was part of a frat, but honestly it wasn't really my scene. I was super depressed and had lost the will to do anything at that point, and my memory and concentration were impaired after the car accident, so I also failed a few classes for the first time in my life. About a year after the breakup, I went to EDC 2019, and that was one of the most impactful events of my entire life. I discovered a new passion for life and an appreciation for its beauty, maybe because I went with some incredible friends. I saw Martin Garrix at EDC and decided then and there that I would love to be a DJ. Joined my school's DJ club the upcoming semester as a fifth year, and fell in love with the art. I don't believe I have lived my life with many regrets, but one regret I do have is not joining that club right when I entered college. DJing was fun, and the people in that club were spectacular. Now I have a new passion in life, and have pretty much completely moved on. I guess what I'm trying to say is that Ludwig's last tip about not falling in love with the first one is so spot on. Don't ever limit yourself like I did. Do things in college that you yourself would like to do, because you're never going to get those years back. Good luck to everyone going to college, and live your best lives!
@HemantSingh-mb3vd3 жыл бұрын
bababooye
@dolphin_myth3 жыл бұрын
Damn deep story, good thing you moved on though and found something new, just keep going forward
@Mel0nMel Жыл бұрын
Completely wholeheartedly agree. I had a falling out with my girlfriend a month before college and it was the best thing ever. Yes it fucking sucks, but I realized that it doesn't matter. We put so much pressure on our partners, but we really don't *have* to be tied to anyone till we're 25 or older or whatever. Live your lives, don't depend on anyone so early in life
@passwordispassword15853 жыл бұрын
Man story telling and talking to chat lud is top rated. Feels like what it was a year and a half ago again
@fodouh65633 жыл бұрын
i was thinking the same thing man
@jenniferp.54093 жыл бұрын
My fav
@capitalgoldgoblin647421 күн бұрын
Even two years later, right before I’m about to leave for college the KZfaq algorithm gets me right
@dennis_s8 күн бұрын
same here. funny enough, this is 2 years after I started going to school. I'm just now going back to classes after a year and a half
@vuxigeck52813 жыл бұрын
I genuinely wrote down every piece of advice that he gave. No kidding here, some of his stuff did genuinely help (either by reinforcing what I already knew or by being a new piece of info). Absolutely loved the stream. Thank you so much for doing it, Lud!
@dominikjust58023 жыл бұрын
Yikes
@xeno73203 жыл бұрын
@@dominikjust5802 ?
@aidankennedy11763 жыл бұрын
Everybody said college would be so much harder than high school but you can make your own schedule and be much more selective in the classes you take as long as they fall under your major... it's honestly easier in my opinion. Much more freedom
@MrCrunch8083 жыл бұрын
Fewer classes and more time is real goated for being able to just breeze by. don't know how bad 2nd and 3rd year are going to be though as a CSE major.
@WanderTheNomad3 жыл бұрын
The only problem with freedom is when you're not self-disciplined and/or motivated, but that's just a small caveat.
@SCFick3183 жыл бұрын
*scoughing in tougher engineering majors*
@tb10523 жыл бұрын
Depends on the degree for typical undergraduate degrees yes but for advanced undergraduate degrees no .
@sharilajeeeeee3 жыл бұрын
depends on what you find hard in school. and yeah i dont think theres a one size fit all advice but as long as you cross out your goal/s at whatever stage of your life you're in without losing your shit then its all good.
@immaculatevlogs92493 жыл бұрын
I leave tomorrow for my junior year and I’m excited to agree w everything Ludwig says regardless of my own experiences
@marouaneerraisse61653 жыл бұрын
Hey good luck man . Im still in high school and i want to go to a good college in the US (im an international student) . Any advices ?
@chef_moquin95353 жыл бұрын
I love how people were flexing their SAT’s Score in chat, the scores thing that means absolutely nothing once you get in college 😂
@YetiBandit3 жыл бұрын
This is pretty accurate I gotta admit. Literally only thing I’d add is to at least start off strong. Not sure about majority of colleges but often your GPA will sort of snowball. So it’s easier to keep it from going down than it is to bring it up.
@maddux35953 жыл бұрын
Notes: I have no notes because i'm going to major in Engineering, so nothing applies to me.
@Randome2023 жыл бұрын
15:15 this applies to Eng. majors from my personal experience, same with ratemyprofessor. Also, like ludwig said, take your non-major electives online and over the summer; which depending on your university you'll be taking summer classes whether you want to or not so might as well fill that time with easy classes and make normal term easier, this includes your english classes.
@AsseelAlnuaimi3 жыл бұрын
Everything Lud said is accurate!! I recommend going to office hours! Going to office hours to get the extra help you need AND build a professional relationship with the professors! You will definitely need a professor help once you graduate (like a character letter or reference letter for an internship you want to get in to. Or something else like future advice) I'm STEM, graduated with 3.0 😂 yeah math isn't easy.
@emmaf57053 жыл бұрын
Another thing to add here, going to office hours shows them that you are simply trying, which could earn you some points (brownie or maybe even score if you are lucky). If you mess up, the professor is going to be more likely to help someone who legit tried be someone who started the night before
@AsseelAlnuaimi3 жыл бұрын
@@emmaf5705 Yes!! Definitely!! Definitely earn some brownie points! I remember the time I was taking the hardest math course and I was literally failing, I had an F. I talked with my professor on what I need to do to be better and he was dead honest with me and told me that I have zero chance of passing his course. His words were harsh but then I realized it is motivating; got the motivation to work harder. Go to class, go to office hours, study more, ask questions in class, and bam! Ended up passing the course! Yeah so NEVER lose motivation even if the professor tells you that you will not pass his/her class.
@beansforjeans2 жыл бұрын
What do you talk about w/ profs if you don't need help with academics, like just to build a good relationship?
@goldenbunnies4143Ай бұрын
@@beansforjeansyeah that’s what I was wondering 😭
@JojoDigitalArtist3 жыл бұрын
Lud did the same thing I did in college make an easy schedule, pack on hours when you can and keep your fridays free. Minus like 3 classes college was a breeze for me. Only thing I didn’t do was clubs, and my social life was terrible for a while until I started talking to more people my last two years.
@goncaloaraujo66443 жыл бұрын
Me, a European, I pay 1800 euros for the entire course. Here, in Portugal, you choose the course and then everyone has the same classes and you can’t really choose the schedule in the first semester. And if you are a Portuguese after graduating college you emigrate to a better European country and that’s why Portugal is losing a lot of people.
@matejnovosad91523 жыл бұрын
Free here in Slovakia.
@heath68253 жыл бұрын
To this day, I still wonder if Ludwig’s degrees will ever actually be useful to him
@Jack_L3 жыл бұрын
He dabbled with journalism during the election, and sometimes he even speaks proper English
@Chronomatrix3 жыл бұрын
Does is matter? He made more money streaming than he would have made in all his life with that career.
@grumpydoodle84553 жыл бұрын
Ok but actually no cap his public speaking classes probably paying for themselves rn
@mistypeaks13753 жыл бұрын
No shot
@sebflo41373 жыл бұрын
@@Jack_L yes sometimes
@TallerThanYou3 жыл бұрын
This literally just convinced me to go to college thanks lud.
@bobwilson003 жыл бұрын
yeah, if you can afford it, college is awesome. Even if you hated high school college is so much better. You get SO much more freedom and it's honestly just as hard if not easier due to said freedom
@anshi50983 жыл бұрын
@@FukFaceStabber I think that might depend person to person. Some people in school would blindly follow rules, wouldnt even read one page ahead if the teacher didnt tell them to and I think they will get fucked in college. I stopped listening to my teachers since I was 15 because following them gave me a lot of stress.
@thorvaldspear3 жыл бұрын
@@FukFaceStabber Basically if you are a procrastinator freedom is a bad thing. I know from experience.
@TheSuperJepphyKiller Жыл бұрын
@@anshi5098 Exactly! And that’s such a terrible thing, School doesn’t prepare you for this all this freedom, all this time to manage, and so yes, a lot of people get fucked because of that.
@SleepyGolen22 күн бұрын
12:14 bro makes a good point about super cheap community colleges. In fact, Oregon is hosting something called “the Oregon promise” which gives you 2 years of community college FOR FREE and you can transfer to a 4 year to finish out a bachelor’s degree.
@eveofall6663 жыл бұрын
I graduated college with a degree in physics and in astronomy and astrophysics. For STEM in particular, ALWAYS have a backup plan. Even if you will never actually drop out, it really helps with peace of mind during the really bad classes. I got through two semesters Honors Quantum Mechanics by reminding myself I could always go into wedding photography if I couldn't do it anymore.
@eveofall6663 жыл бұрын
Also if you work well in groups, work exclusively in groups for STEM majors otherwise you're social life will be near non-existent.
@wade3ed3 жыл бұрын
Hey, im graduating this year with a physics and astronomy bachelors. If you don't mind me asking what are you doing now (like job/ grad school)??
@eveofall6663 жыл бұрын
@@wade3ed I'm at grad school for astronomy, I have a few friends who switched fields after graduation and are now in grad school/masters programs for those fields, and one friend who is now working in industry as an aerospace engineer. No matter what you'll be fine dude, good luck
@wade3ed3 жыл бұрын
@@eveofall666 ok, thank you for the detailed response
@sufidapoofy50853 жыл бұрын
this cheered me up, love his storytimes
@user-ww1wh3wz5d3 жыл бұрын
All good advice, except your major absolutely matters. Lud even kinda admitted to it when he said f off to the STEM majors earning 6 figures. Remember that college is an investment and that most majors are bs and you won't actually make any more money by having them. Unless you're in STEM, accounting, pre-med, etc. Choose very wisely, else end up f-ed with student loans with low pay, financially crippling yourself.
@gregothy91903 жыл бұрын
America Sadge
@qcthesxientist3 жыл бұрын
@@gregothy9190 person has kangaroo profile pic.
@retron47403 жыл бұрын
@@qcthesxientist So that makes them Australian? FeelsDankMan Clap
@qcthesxientist3 жыл бұрын
@@retron4740 aye if you got a red white and blue bald eagle profile pic Ima think your american.
@ViennaDarlingvd3 жыл бұрын
I’m so sick of the “most majors are bs” thing. If you expect your career to be in gender studies, sure, you’re unlikely to find a job in that field. But a liberal arts degree is meant to make you versatile. I know English majors who make 100k a year easy. Classics majors are actually in high demand from government institutions like the CIA. Most schools just don’t give students the resources to find jobs that match their skill set, but they’re out there. But college in the US is still stupid expensive and I highly recommend people look into Asian/European countries for their education - they’re so much cheaper
@D33r_Hunt3r_3 жыл бұрын
Ludwig: "If you're a STEM major you did that to yourself" Me (civil engineering student): "But... Yeah no that's fair"
@danielkaniewski7273 жыл бұрын
I 100% fell for the first girl I talked to at orientation and it was awful. Lud's right don't do it
@saugesmith27603 жыл бұрын
I'm a college senior doing a B.S. in cell and molecular biology, haven't taken a step on campus yet, going for my first in person class monday, hopefully this info will help
@aidankennedy11763 жыл бұрын
Same yo
@david78003 жыл бұрын
same, went on campus last sem for first time for chem 1A, was pretty chill ngl
@mistajostur68933 жыл бұрын
Same dude
@radkouse1of13 жыл бұрын
that's sounds smart
@bobwilson003 жыл бұрын
I'm starting my 2nd year as a STEM major at a STEM university, I think all of this was really good advice including the parts you said didn't apply to stem majors. If you've already decided that you want to be a stem person then your exact major doesn't really matter all that much. You can basically always change it later, even several years in, with little to no consequences. My college doesn't have *as* many clubs, and while I've been looking I haven't really found any that I'm interested in, I'm hoping to find one this year to join. Finding friends is DEFINITELY very important, I would suggest making sure to join discords that people make for your classes/school and talking to people on there, and also doing events and stuff with people even if the event itself isn't very interesting. Most of my friends right now I know from going to a late-night religious hike in the first week of school that a couple people in my major wanted to go to to meet up. Normally that was the last thing I'd ever do but I did it just to meet new people and now I'm close friends with several of the people who went. Also for that last part in the video, I found my first girlfriend at college and so far we're going great and our 8 months is in a couple days, so I guess I'd have to disagree :)
@lairyhegs99563 жыл бұрын
As a STEM major at TAMU, I can confirm that most of his advice about course load doesn't apply. Some of my classes are hard as shit.
@KrisKrueger3 жыл бұрын
I graduated from ASU back in 2014, and just gotta say so much of this hits home, especially the last part. Would love to talk more about this topic because my story is so similar, but I’ll leave it at the fact that I am a happy homeowner, biochem major downgraded from bioengineering for bad gpa, lucky enough to work in r&d locally closing in on those 6 figures!
@tigerking32973 жыл бұрын
I didn't realize how much college cost until I started it. I was fine, but since I thought I should've lived on campus I was in debt, and got kicked out of living on campus last month. But now the school owes me more than I owe them (I think?) so they give me the money now. Also my friend a block away from the school said I could live with him, which I might do since it'll probably be cheaper. Also because I thought I'd be on campus until a month ago my schedule is FUCKED. Always be wary of the classes you're picking, and pick very very early. I only got one class on Wednesdays and Fridays, but because I still have to go there, it still waste a day's worth of money for travel.
@nick156843 жыл бұрын
You're really lucky then. I got into a similar situation where my state university requires you to live on campus, the tuition by itself was actually really reasonable, but the room and board is really expensive. I ended up just not being able to attend at all. I Couldn't attend from home because my state university is way far north of me (over 140 miles), so living on campus would literally be the only way to attend. For some reason they thought it would be a bright idea to construct the college in the middle of nowhere (probably a ploy to get extra money for room and board) because I live in the most populous area of my state, where you'd presume it'd make more logical and logistical sense to have the campus, but no, apparently not.
@matthicks15453 жыл бұрын
I just started college today so this is gonna be a banger for me
@HellaMobile3 жыл бұрын
Go make friends
@luciarevelt5853 жыл бұрын
good luck
@woshhhhhh81743 жыл бұрын
I just finished my second STEM degree. The schedule advice is super helpful. Remember to start studying one month before exams, even if it's 1 hour a day at the start. Saves so much stress and time without cramming.
@MrCrunch8083 жыл бұрын
Yeah, learned that the hard way first year in Electromagnetic physics by failing the midterm. Studied my ass off the last week and a half and aced the final and passed with a B. So study early and often. Also its important to have checklist with all your assignments and their due dates so you can keep track of what you need to do.
@apple-de8tx8 ай бұрын
Damn. My biology finals is in 2 days and I haven't started, going to study now
@spacelevator3 жыл бұрын
Never underestimate how important making friends is. I go to uni in Australia and when covid made us study at home I was completely isolated because I didn't didn't have strong friendships
@Saltail3 жыл бұрын
I'm starting my last college semester this fall, so I can attest to all of these. Especially the ratemyprofessor part, that saved me a lot of headache with shitty teachers
@retro-DD3 жыл бұрын
Haha Lud biting Abroad in Japan with that thumbnail. I love how Chris Broad popped in the chat when Ludwig was watching his fried chicken video
@AbroadinJapan3 жыл бұрын
You sneaky rascal
@juniorme20013 жыл бұрын
It's just a coincidence, he swears it, right lud?
@apple-de8tx8 ай бұрын
What's going on here
@user23xx763 жыл бұрын
ludwig: my degrees didnt help me also ludwig: "I FORGOR"
@freezingentertainment3 жыл бұрын
this kinda makes me regret dropping out to purse my small business but at the same time made me see that everyone has their own paths no matter what. Thank you Ludwig :)
@_DN-xp4ro3 жыл бұрын
this was actually so wholesome. i wish i had someone to tell me these things when i started college. i am extremely socially challenged so... i went through college without making any real friends. most ive made are fleeting ones, lasting only through the semester bc i had the same class as them. at the time, i didnt feel really lonely. im mostly by myself anyway like 95% of the time. i played games a lot on my freetime, the library is my home (not to study mind you, but to sleep. a lot.) if you are the type of introvert who can't make friends on their own and has to rely on extroverts 'adopting' you, well, you can't do that in college if you want to make friends. it hasn't happened to me at least. unlike highschool where you get to be with people consistently, your peers in college are extremely fleeting. unless you join an organization/club/etc. which you should *force* yourself to do tbh. it'll do you good, you just got to get past that initial reluctance. id say friends are what will make you through the tough parts of college. my problems, i had to deal with alone with no one to turn to lmao. at least with friends, you have that backbone support, like people to help you academically, even emotionally. i didnt get to enjoy college that much. sometimes i wish i could redo my choices lmao. it feels like ive wasted years of my life but it is what it is. at least i got a degree.
@ItsIsaan3 жыл бұрын
Keeping Fridays free is goated. It's how I've survived college.
@tedc80213 жыл бұрын
He jokes about stem majors, but we are the only ones who can drop gifted subs
@wehavebiscuits3 жыл бұрын
lulw
@kristalbarajas15903 жыл бұрын
LMFAO OMG THIS IS GOOD
@anuraagkumar9782 жыл бұрын
TRUEEE
@The_Three_Pines3 жыл бұрын
Such helpful knowledge dropped by the college grad himself!
@snowflake_182 жыл бұрын
I've been doing online college for a year now and for this upcoming semester, but I am so excited (and nervous!) to go to campus in the spring! I see and hear so many things about college that I can't help but get excited! Especially since I've been stuck in a small town school my entire life and never truly made friends there, but I'm hoping this big college will be an opportunity to branch out more. "New school, new me" and all that....ah! I can't wait!
@dayadabu3028 Жыл бұрын
I hope it’s been going well for you ❤
@blazercg36213 жыл бұрын
I start college on Monday and another thing I would add to is that you should make online friends if u haven’t already. A lot of my middle school friends ditched me, yet my online friends know more about me than they ever did. It’s crazy how many people you can meet over the internet and we even might move into an apartment soon.
@yahzzie3 жыл бұрын
i love Ludwigs community, when i donated and said i was heading off to college but was kinda nervous, a bunch of the chat was like good luck dono and it made me smile
@samuelc.78673 жыл бұрын
9:03 "how hard is the schedule you are making, and how does this schedule let you have a social life" me, a stem major: we can have a social life?
@bryannguyen23833 жыл бұрын
I'm going to a state university this year after transferring from community college. I can't wait to actual get into the groove of things and make new friends. The past year has been rough
@somethingsomethingelse88123 жыл бұрын
went to a community college for 2 years and then transferred to a 4 year college, was really looking forward to starting university and then covid hit and im pretty much done with my degree lmao i hope we won't go online again mid semester this time
@bryannguyen23833 жыл бұрын
@@somethingsomethingelse8812 Yeah unfortunately all my classes are online this semester, but luckily the campus is open for those who were able to get classes on-campus so I'll be going just to get the "university feel" lol. Hopefully I'll be done in 2 years cuz after 4 years at a cc I'm tired
@jionexna3 жыл бұрын
Same here man, I can’t wait to start classes Monday
@shiv42302 жыл бұрын
I remember watching this video when it came out, and I was a freshman going into my first semester in college. I’m now starting my second semester and I remembered this video and I wanted to see how I feel about what he said in the video with some experience. 1. Definitely don’t fall for anyone, made that mistake and ruined what could potentially have been a good friendship, also made the second half of my semester really rough, its really just dumb. 2. You have to stay on top of your classes, I’m a STEM major, and I think he’s right in the part where college might not be harder than high school, but its a lot easier to fall behind in a class, as a class is squeezed into a single semester rather than a full year, and its also a lot harder to catch up in a class once u fall behind. You have to simultaneously relearn everything you missed, while also fully learning everything thats going on currently in the class so you dont fall behind even further. If you slack off for a week or 2 youre probably fucked. 3. Also since you’re taking fewer classes, they have a bigger impact on your gpa, I thought i’d be fine if i had some mediocre grades, but I ended up crippling my gpa, which I’m trying to bring back up this semester, knowing it’ll be difficult. Fewer classes equals much less room for error. That’s why so many people end up failing out of college based on their grades, it’s not because their dumb as I previously thought, it’s because its a snowballing effect, and once you fuck up once its hard to stop the snowball. Thats why he said in the beginning one of the major things you have to do is not fuck up. 4. Finding a group of friends is extremely important. Just being around people in general helps you a lot. It seems obvious but sometimes this can get forgotten. I was lucky as some people I didn’t know very well in high school went to my college and I ended up becoming close to them, and made a group of friends that way, but I also joined a few clubs and met more people there. The fresh start thing is really true, you can really just do whatever you want. My college has over 50k students. It’s not like high school, once you see someone you’re probably not gonna see them again for a long time, unless you have a class with them or something like that. It doesn’t matter if you leave a bad impression on them, they most likely don’t know anyone you know or are friends with anyone you know. I still have to work on this, but its been something I’ve been getting better at ever since I got to college.
@shiv42302 жыл бұрын
I’m probably gonna come back to this next semester to see how it aged, or if there’s anything else I feel like I can add on then
@dragonxetron7833 Жыл бұрын
Update?
@FluffyTobi3 жыл бұрын
I graduated with my associates in business and graphic design almost 4 years ago now. Mine was set up so we could not select the courses we took, nor could we select the instructors we had. We also could not select the amount of classes we took at one time. We were simply allowed to choose if we wanted the schedule that allows students to start an hour early or the schedule for an hour later. On average we had 6 classes per term. Each term lasted 8 weeks; every 4 weeks we had a mid term for each class, and on the 8th week we had a final for that class. We had classes through summer and had at most maybe 2-3 days off for a big holiday such as Christmas. All of these things combined, with the fact that I traveled to and from school rather than living on campus basically meant I had no social life, but I was so busy that I didn't care. A lot of the things I learned, I am still using to this day! I was able to graduate in 1 year and 4 months with only about 11k in debt to pay off. I was fortunate enough to be able to pay it off in about 2 years' time with the addition of medical bills and whatnot. If you can handle the extra workload, by all means I'd say go for it because lightening that debt is fantastic! However, keep your mental health in mind as well. Overworking yourself isn't good and eventually it will catch up. If you can't handle the extra work, it's also perfectly acceptable to take extra time for the things you need! Additionally, if you have something outside of school that is affecting your abilities or wellbeing, by all means, talk to your instructors! Most of them will be understanding/willing to help. Life can hit you with a curveball at any moment, sometimes you have to speak up about it. Lastly, do your best to keep yourselves safe, not just in terms of the pandemic but in general. Best wishes to all of you folks progressing your education!
@crohazard89183 жыл бұрын
damn that last piece of advice came in about... 4 years too late for me XD.. but otherwise very very solid advice, especially the one about making friends and making a memorable first impression.
@mediocre33943 жыл бұрын
Have ludwig’s nails always been painted? That’s sick man love the color
@Sc4r4byte3 жыл бұрын
It was originally an IRL stream with Hasan recently. but since the color is "Mogul Moves", it has transcended that moment.
@IktaSol3 жыл бұрын
My tip (as a STEM): My best tip to find a good professor / class is ask your seniors. People like to gossip, so not only you can use it as a topic to get to know the seniors, you can also get useful information.
@mystellix44263 жыл бұрын
first day of ENG 101 my professor looked us dead in the eyes and said I legit don't care what you do, please cheat on my tests and make my life easier.. safe to say I got a 105 in the class
@qoweed3 жыл бұрын
Stanford Astrophysics graduate here. I have seen people drop out because their lives and mental health were fucked simply because their parents/financers grew more toxic. It isn't always, well, almost never on you to plan through before subscribing to a college. There are a 1000 different problems that affect people not including family deaths and all. And don't follow ratemyprofessors because the data is extremely skewed both in favour and against. DTEM
@06eli3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the help, I’ll make sure to do college right and not major in English
@SethBoyerD3 жыл бұрын
I graduated from college this spring and let me tell you, it is the best 4 years of your life but it goes insanely fast, so make sure you take the time to appreciate it!
@squiggur62582 жыл бұрын
It’s not going that way for me
@jubjubschwartz40783 жыл бұрын
As a stem major who graduated in under 4 years. I never took a class load over 18 credits. I recommend focusing on your core classes that relate to your major and sprinkling your Gen Ed’s through your college career. Gen Ed’s are going to be around every semester, where as some of your core classes are only offered certain times of the year. My final semester of school I had 2 Gen Ed classes and it made my life so much easier because I didn’t have to steer about 5 projects a week.
@apple-de8tx8 ай бұрын
My first semester is ending and I'm just stumbling upon this now
@superbob243 жыл бұрын
Community colleges are underrated. My college paid my tuition in full and actually gave me more financial aid than my tuition so I MADE money going to college.
@Justin-im2zf3 жыл бұрын
Wait what?
@drfpslegend4149 Жыл бұрын
As a stem major, I feel like some of the things that he said which seem to not apply to stem majors actually do apply very much. Your major isn't set in stone the second you pick it, like I switched from Physics To Math after my first 1.5 years of college, and I knew people who did the same thing between Biology and Physics, or even from Biology to Creative Writing, as well. I actually think it's pretty common across all college majors for freshman/sophomores to change between a few majors before they find the right one. With regards to finding which professors are good and which ones are bad, the best indicator I've found is to read the syllabus you get at the beginning of the term and also to see which book(s) will be required if any. The structure of the course in the syllabus will usually tell you how much work you'll have to put in and how challenging it will be overall. The book(s) will tell you what you can expect from the professor i.e. if it's a "standard" text of the field (usually at least 20 years old) the professor might be using it as a substitute to make up for poor instruction quality, versus a more recent text that presents things in modern ways and formats might indicate the professor cares about your learning as a student more and so is going to be a better instructor. With that being said, I've had professors who are notoriously difficult and found them to be fair instructors, and I've had "easy" professors who structure the course in a way that made it hard for me to learn, so don't go into a particular class thinking you know how your experience is going to be. The last thing I can say about stem majors is that your success depends heavily on how motivated you are as an individual to learn the material outside of class. For me, that was reading the math textbooks cover to cover instead of copying down notes in class word for word from the professor, so that I learned the material thoroughly and independently of the instruction quality, and so that I didn't have to study for the exams most of the time. For some of my math major friends it was working through lots more exercises than was necessary or assigned for homework. For other math major friends it was doing big study sessions where they would go over all the material multiple times before they took an exam. For some of my science major friends (computer science/physics/biology) they would use flashcards to memorize everything that wasn't going to be given to them on their exams. And of course, some of them cried (metaphorically) in a corner the night before the final and prayed for a multiple choice test. Basically, as a stem major, you have to put in effort outside of class to make sure you're really learning the material well, which I feel like is the secret to success that most people who major in stem don't ever talk about. Yeah science and math is difficult if all you're doing is going to lecture and then attempting to do the homework or labs in a vacuum without any additional effort, but it can be made almost easy and very fun if you set yourself up to understand all the material by knowing which methods of learning work for you and actually taking the time to use them effectively.
@yoshedev52903 жыл бұрын
I've been working full-time while doing community college full-time and I haven't had to pay A SINGLE THING. By the end of the first two years I'll have enough for the rest of college but I have literally no friends from doing this. Praise lud for the advice about making friends, you'll end up regretting it
@gabrielhicks80433 жыл бұрын
For any upcoming high school seniors, scholarships and grants are really important. Apply for the FAFSA and any other grants your state may have. There's also a lot of scholarships available for any different things, and if you did pretty well academically you can earn a lot. I didn't even go too out of my way applying to like 1,000 different things, but I’ve basically paid for my first semester of college from scholarships and grants alone. Originally I had to pay like $11,500, and now with all of my financial aid I only have to pay like $100. If it wasn't for that, I couldn't afford to go to college. Seriously, apply for as many scholarships and grants as you can, you'll save a whole lot of money and won't have to go into debt to get an education.
@highonlife23233 жыл бұрын
my sleep schedule has adapted to Ludwig upload schedule. I have terrible nightmares.
@garrettgilbert26222 жыл бұрын
Personal number one tip for anyone in college is go to class. I pretty much maintained all responsibilities besides that and screwed myself over quite a few times. Not the only thing you need to do but I think its the top option to keep you grounded for the goal of completing college.
@garrettgilbert26222 жыл бұрын
You might think what other responsibilities could you have. I studied, did assignments, worked, etc. just treated class attendance like a 50% achievement goal. Lost a lot of free grade percentage to attendance related grading. In the harder classes those free points were the difference between failure and success.
@taurus7395 Жыл бұрын
Thanks to Ludwig’s advice to join a club I both had my first real relationship from joining the Baptist club on campus and made tons of friends there, and became the youngest frat president ever in my chapters history
@moosoobee3 жыл бұрын
STEM bros, get an internship as early as possible. Getting a job when you graduate will be so much harder if you don't have any experience under your belt.
@TrainableEwe03 жыл бұрын
Had my freshman year at ASU last year so this legitimately could not be more useful
@joshgreer43393 жыл бұрын
lmao same
@mimswhims71073 жыл бұрын
saaame
@bblvrable3 жыл бұрын
Only someone who had gone through life with a name like Ludwig would think that Anders was a substantial improvement.
@emptyricebowl3 жыл бұрын
My #1 tip before going to college is applying for community college the first two years, not only to save money but save your time. They teach you the basics like any other college would, the last two years of college is learning and earning the degree you want, that’s for you to decide which college you want to go to.
@marcusferro75883 жыл бұрын
This was actually really good advice, I’m still in high school but my parents are pressuring me to think about which course I should take and what should I do. Thank you
@zumi30513 жыл бұрын
i cant stop thinking about an alternate universe where lud didnt join the smash club. like he just has no friends and gets fired from a new job every week NOPPERS
@musicdude15403 жыл бұрын
This comment sucks
@zumi30513 жыл бұрын
@@musicdude1540 if you reply to this comment with "this comment sucks too." then you admit defeat
@musicdude15403 жыл бұрын
@@zumi3051 this comment sucks too.
@EpochIsEpic3 жыл бұрын
STEM major here. I don’t schedule my homework, I schedule my free time. I think that says a lot
@HMPRODIGY3 жыл бұрын
11:20 actually the best advice, try to bang out as much classes as u can per semester, where its manageable! Youll be there for less time and the classes can be typically easy, but thats all dependent on what your going for Btw in my experience classes you take can and may overlap with other major requirements, if youre considering switching.
@albertchang-yoo22683 жыл бұрын
Start college tomorrow, thanks for the advice Lud :)
@lacroixenjoyer54053 жыл бұрын
This is actually such solid advice and I truly do appreciate it! As always this story time was lovely, keep up the great content boss!
@chef_moquin95353 жыл бұрын
One other piece for advice for people going to college and graduating college, do not stop learning and growing as a person when college ends. The end of college is just the start of your real life
@logany71672 жыл бұрын
Dude, you nailed your description of STEM students (I can confirm because I am one)
@zixianchen3 жыл бұрын
@18:22 I wish I had this 6 yrs ago lol
@captainskipper50823 жыл бұрын
Young Ludwig was still a chad
@sydbugnano84312 жыл бұрын
Join a club! I joined my professional frat, and it’s how I’ve gotten my past two internships and it’s how I met my roommates. Don’t have to stick with it, but definitely a good starting point for larger schools
@corynnetabatha75673 жыл бұрын
Im a junior in high school and this actually made me feel so much better about going to college.
@pattykcake3 жыл бұрын
Glad I’m getting this advice now as I’m entering my last semester of college 😒 (double major too, you’re not special lud)
@ceroman_3 жыл бұрын
Currently looking at colleges so this is great
@christianmirich56703 жыл бұрын
As someone from Washington, I am very jealous of my friends who had the opportunity to do Running Start bc they did indeed graduate college much faster and cheaper
@DeathNuggz2 жыл бұрын
15:17 - this is INCREDIBLY true when your group is based in STEM
@muzzi52373 жыл бұрын
All STEM majors think that other majors are useless Source: me, STEM major
@jionexna3 жыл бұрын
That’s because they are (also STEM major)
@captainskipper50823 жыл бұрын
I wasn’t expecting actually helpful advice
@elusivecal39153 жыл бұрын
I love that when he zooms in on all of chat saying hi yt, and you see me in chat say hello editors
@clickbait52602 жыл бұрын
Did I just voluntarily watch an actually useful college prep video? 10x more useful than any resource I found before college
@ALtheBoi3 жыл бұрын
Perfect timing Lud, thanks for the advice
@Alexis-lq2ri3 жыл бұрын
I’m starting my first semester of college in two weeks so this was actually helpful
@calebwilliams30553 жыл бұрын
What club you wanna join?
@Jack_L3 жыл бұрын
I went from failing pre-calculus in 11th grade and almost not graduating in 12th grade to graduating magna cum loude with a B.S. in computer science and only took on $20k in student loan debt without scholarships or any kind of college fund from my parents. Here is some advice (for Americans at least): - If you aren't enrolled in college, and aren't sure what you want to do, consider a trade. Trade jobs can pay really well without taking on debt, and they're in high demand because people think "no college education = failure," but that's bullshit. Bonus: you would get to progress from apprentice to master which sounds very cool. If college is the path for you: - People only care where you got the LAST piece of paper. Community colleges save you a ton of money on associates degrees, especially if you're lost in life but know you want a higher education. I used community college to get my shit together, learn to be a good student, and explore my interests for cheap which is how I decided on my major. Relearning material also boosted my confidence in certain areas, math in particular. - In-state schools save you a ton of money as well. I went to an in-state community college and an in-state university. In both cases the in-state tuition was LESS THAN HALF of the out-of-state tuition. - Some state community colleges (at least mine) have programs for transferring to state universities, so credits transfer nicely and in my case they even offered a discount on tuition if a minimum GPA was maintained, up to 30% off which is what I got and maintained all through my time at the university. - If you can live at home while attending college, this will save you a ton of money. Room and board was nearly as much as in-state tuition at my university. I was able to live at home through both community college and university. - Attending community college and living at home are not good ways to make friends and have a college experience. This is a major trade off that I sometimes regret. - You can apply for scholarships while you're in college. I wish I had done this. - You can find most textbooks as PDF's online. I never bought a textbook. - Don't make a habit of skipping class. You miss more information than you realize, and you might accidentally miss an exam like an idiot. - Sit in the front of the class and pay attention. Professors will know you and like you. I missed an exam once but the professor knew me from the front row and showed mercy. - Ask questions, you're there to learn. Swallow your pride. Everyone has questions, not everyone asks them. - Become friendly with teaching assistants. In my experience they usually grade shit and they also have office hours where you can hang out and get homework done with their help when needed. - Ask those TA's about the difficulty of future classes to better understand how to structure your schedule and which classes not to take at the same time. - Summer and winter classes can save you time. If you could have graduated and gotten a job making $50k/year a year ago, then that extra year cost you an additional $50k. - Everyone, but especially ladies, share your location with a trusted friend and please never go to frat parties alone.
@FREDDYDOG9113 жыл бұрын
I think being successfully productive at university/college is more than just time management, it requires energy management too. Try and co-ordinate your college work and other activities (jobs too if you can) according to what gives and takes away energy during the day/week. Obviously that isn't an easy practice to implement when negotiating with mental health and physical health burdens, but I think it's worth keeping in mind.