Over 800 tips in The Secrets of College Success

Heading off to college? Or perhaps already there? This book's just for you. Winner of the 2010 USA Book News Award for best book in the college category, The Secrets of College Success combines easy-to-follow tips that really work with insider information that few professors are willing to reveal—but all students need to know.


The over 800 tips in this book will show you how to:
  • Pick courses and choose a major
  • Manage your time and develop college-level study skills
  • Get on top of the core requirements
  • Get good grades and avoid stress
  • Interact effectively with the professor
  • Match college and career, and more.
New to this second edition are tips for:
  • Online courses and MOOCs
  • Community colleges, engineering schools, and arts and design colleges
  • E-readers, tablets, and laptops
  • Taking out student loans and paying them off, and more.
Ideal for college students at any stage, and college-bound high school students, The Secrets of College Success makes a wonderful back-to-college or high-school-graduation gift—or a smart investment in your own future.

Review
The book can be picked up and read at any time, as it's not really one you need to read in chronological order. Being made up of lists of tips, tricks, facts and myth dispelling knowledge, this book is really more of a reference book than anything else.

This is a down-to-Earth and easy to read guide covering the entire college experience. Exaggerated humor is occasionally used effectively to illustrate certain points. This is a second edition and covers community colleges, engineering schools and art schools along with on-line courses and tips, all these additions to the original book.

With all of the applications and acceptances, everyone is buzzed with what their future school will be like. This is a short basic college guide that gives some good tips along with some what to expects for incoming freshman. There are several references that are easily bookmarked for later use.

This book does have a lot of solid information, but everything is arrange in Top 10 (or 11 or 12 or 13) lists, which makes it seem quite scattered and not cohesive.