BertaCollins
New member
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2026
- Messages
- 5
I didn't know what office hours were until my second year of college. 
Not because I'm dumb. Because no one told me.
The Backstory:
My dad installs drywall. My mom manages a dollar store. They're brilliant people—my dad can build a house from scratch and my mom can stretch a paycheck until it begs for mercy—but they don't know how college works.
When I said "I have a question about the assignment," they said "ask the teacher."
They didn't know there was a special time for asking. They didn't know professors just... sit in their offices waiting for students to show up. They didn't know that's normal.
So I didn't know either.
The Moment I Found Out:
Sophomore year, sitting in the cafeteria, overhearing a conversation:
Wait. You can just... go to their offices? And they help you? For free? That's a thing??
I felt so stupid. And also so angry. Who was supposed to tell me this??
The Things I've Learned (that everyone else seemed to know):
✦ Office hours aren't just for emergencies. They're for anything. Questions about the reading? Go. Want to chat about the field? Go. Need career advice? Go.
✦ You don't need an appointment. You just... show up. Wild.
✦ Professors actually LIKE when students come. (They're just sitting there anyway.)
✦ You can ask about anything. One time I asked my poli sci professor about a TV show that mentioned his field. We talked for 45 minutes.
✦ Office hours = free tutoring + networking + mentorship + sometimes snacks.
The Guilt:
I'm the first person in my family who can just... walk into a professor's office and ask for help. My parents never had that. They figured everything out alone.
Sometimes I feel guilty about the resources I have that they didn't. But then I remember: this is why they worked so hard. So I could have opportunities they didn't.
So now I use office hours for both of us. I ask the questions my mom would ask if she were here. I get the help my dad would want me to get.
The Message to Other First-Gens:
If you didn't know about office hours until just now: hi, same. Go this week. Just once. Say "I wanted to introduce myself" if you're nervous. It counts.
We're not behind. We just started from a different place. And that's okay.
Your Turn:
What's something you learned embarrassingly late that everyone else seemed to know? Make me feel better about my sophomore-year revelation.

Not because I'm dumb. Because no one told me.
The Backstory:
My dad installs drywall. My mom manages a dollar store. They're brilliant people—my dad can build a house from scratch and my mom can stretch a paycheck until it begs for mercy—but they don't know how college works.
When I said "I have a question about the assignment," they said "ask the teacher."
They didn't know there was a special time for asking. They didn't know professors just... sit in their offices waiting for students to show up. They didn't know that's normal.
So I didn't know either.
The Moment I Found Out:
Sophomore year, sitting in the cafeteria, overhearing a conversation:
I literally stopped chewing my sandwich."Did you go to Dr. Chen's office hours?"
"Yeah, she helped me fix my thesis statement."
"Same, she's so nice."
Wait. You can just... go to their offices? And they help you? For free? That's a thing??
I felt so stupid. And also so angry. Who was supposed to tell me this??
The Things I've Learned (that everyone else seemed to know):
✦ Office hours aren't just for emergencies. They're for anything. Questions about the reading? Go. Want to chat about the field? Go. Need career advice? Go.
✦ You don't need an appointment. You just... show up. Wild.
✦ Professors actually LIKE when students come. (They're just sitting there anyway.)
✦ You can ask about anything. One time I asked my poli sci professor about a TV show that mentioned his field. We talked for 45 minutes.
✦ Office hours = free tutoring + networking + mentorship + sometimes snacks.
The Guilt:
I'm the first person in my family who can just... walk into a professor's office and ask for help. My parents never had that. They figured everything out alone.
Sometimes I feel guilty about the resources I have that they didn't. But then I remember: this is why they worked so hard. So I could have opportunities they didn't.
So now I use office hours for both of us. I ask the questions my mom would ask if she were here. I get the help my dad would want me to get.
The Message to Other First-Gens:
If you didn't know about office hours until just now: hi, same. Go this week. Just once. Say "I wanted to introduce myself" if you're nervous. It counts.
We're not behind. We just started from a different place. And that's okay.
Your Turn:
What's something you learned embarrassingly late that everyone else seemed to know? Make me feel better about my sophomore-year revelation.