Questions for A business Major

<p>Hey business majors,</p>

<p>I have an assignment where I have to interview other business majors.</p>

<p>Here are the questions.</p>

<p>1) What was the main difference they found between high school and studying business in college?</p>

<p>2) What were the most important new study skills you had to learn?</p>

<p>3) What approach do you use to manage your time effectively?</p>

<p>4)What do you think about group study? What are its values and benefits?</p>

<p>It would be awesome if anyone could answer even just one of these.
Thank you for you time,
JDS</p>

<p>bump for responses </p>

<p>:)</p>

<p>bump bump bump</p>

<p>Ask some of your friends in real life… don’t you have any?</p>

<p>Well at the time I was a senior in high school… And none of my friends were business majors moron.</p>

<p>You bumped your own thread twice in fifteen minutes, and then wrote back to the one response you had after 5 months to defend against the statement that you have no friends. Was any of that necessary? No.</p>

<p>^ Your only post is making that statement commenting on the necessity, or lack thereof, in a person’s response. Answer your own question. Was going through the registration process just to make that response necessary? No.</p>

<p>You still can acquire the necessary information by walking around your campus and asking random people. That way is quicker than waiting for people on a forum to answer your questions. You don’t have to rely on “friends.” I can tell how it’s tough, though, with you flaming a person(s) for asking a simple question, whether or not it was intended to hurt you.</p>

<p>@domrom1</p>

<p>The OP isn’t exactly making a smart action by bumping his/her thread, which probably didn’t leave it’s new-post position to begin with. Nevertheless, I’m in no way opposing your statement, though.</p>

<p>@OP</p>

<p>Anyways, I believe your first question is grammatically incorrect, and thus I don’t understand what you’re trying to ask.</p>

<p>For the following two questions, I don’t really have an answer because nothing has changed. I have the same “study habits,” which are bad, and I have not learned to use my time more efficiently. If anything, I guess I have more time to utilize for studying. I don’t know if that counts, but in some perspectives, it doesn’t.</p>

<p>For your fourth question, I believe that groups are not something that will have strong effects. Most of the time, they are inefficient because students take it for granted. Only in the upper level courses can they be anywhere near efficient because those smaller and “weeded out” classes are where the serious students are when comparing that to general lecture classes.</p>