<p>Remember that not all professional singers were undergrad music majors. In fact, I have known voice teachers and coaches who would rather work with people who have a liberal arts degree and natural talent rather than with those who already have highly trained voices but little experience of the world outside of practice rooms and concert halls. </p>
<p>Since you are sure you want to transfer, you are going to have to pick out some schools, work up audition repertoire and you will probably have to record one or more prescreening CD's. While you could try to do some of that on your own, you will probably be more successful if you have professional help. If your current voice teacher is not among the problems, you will need to work with them to explain your intentions and enlist their help going forward. If the current teacher is one of the main problems, you will need to decide whether your best course is sticking with them and toughing it out, switching studios, or dropping the voice major temporarily and finding a private teacher. This last can get somewhat expensive, but will probably cost a lot less than losing a semester's or an entire year's worth of school costs.</p>
<p>Independent of that decision, the basic idea is to make the best use of the time you have this year. You can still take a lot of courses that will be valuable to you if you continue elsewhere as a voice major, or could be used to satisfy distribution requirements or elective credits for some sort of liberal arts degree. It is probably a little late for switching courses this semester, so you may be stuck with a lot of what you already have. For next semester, consider things like the freshman writing course most schools require, some music theory and history, secondary keyboard lessons, beginning Italian (or more advanced if you already speak that language). If those things do not appeal to you, perhaps you are in the wrong major to begin with. Look at the non-musical requirements at some of the schools you want to transfer into and get some of those courses out of the way.</p>
<p>Is there any advisor at Tulane that you trust, be it an academic advisor, a favorite teacher, a member of the clergy, a senior or grad student who has been there for a while? If so, talk to them to get their perspective. Try to figure out exactly what is making you so unhappy in your current situation so that you can avoid repeating the experience elsewhere.</p>
<p>Try to find at least one thing that you like about where you are. It could be a class, a friend, a club or other extracurricular activity, a volunteer opportunity, whatever. That will at least give you something to look forward to while working out the rest of your decisions. Eat nutritious meals and get enough sleep.</p>
<p>Best wishes and good luck.</p>