3 Smart Moves Every Student Should Make Before Their Final Year

For many students, the final year of the university feels overwhelming. Exams pile up, expectations rise, and suddenly the question: What’s next? arises. What often gets overlooked is that the most important decisions aren’t made in the final year itself, but in the time leading up to it.

Students who plan early don’t just reduce stress; they create options. These three smart moves can help you step into your final year feeling prepared, confident, and ahead of the curve.

The first move is learning to track opportunities early, rather than waiting until things feel urgent. Scholarships, internships, exchange programs, and grants usually open months in advance, and many students miss them simply because they start looking too late. By the time deadlines arrive, it’s already too late to gather documents, improve qualifications, or meet eligibility requirements.

When you begin paying attention early, you give yourself time. Time to prepare applications properly, time to improve your profile, and time to make informed decisions instead of rushed ones. This is why following reliable education platforms and staying aware of what’s available can quietly shape your future. Opportunity doesn’t always come loudly, sometimes it passes by unless you’re paying attention.

The second move is building a future-ready CV before you think you need one. Many students believe a CV is something you prepare only after graduation, once you have achievements worth showing. In reality, your CV grows alongside you. It reflects your effort, curiosity, and willingness to learn, not just your final results.

Even before your final year, your experiences already matter. Academic projects, volunteering, online learning, student initiatives, writing, research, or even managing a small personal project all show initiative. A future-ready CV tells decision-makers that you didn’t wait passively for success, you worked toward it. This mindset matters just as much as grades.

The third move is learning at least one practical skill that your classroom may not teach you. While formal education focuses heavily on exams and syllabi, real-world opportunities often depend on skills learned outside traditional lessons. Writing clearly, communicating confidently, using digital tools effectively or understanding how to research and think critically can give you a serious edge.

You don’t need to master everything. Choosing one skill and improving it steadily before your final year can make a noticeable difference in applications, interviews, and academic work. These skills don’t just help you after graduation; they support you throughout your studies.

Your final year should not be about scrambling to catch up. It should be a transition into the next phase of your life with clarity and confidence. Students who succeed aren’t always the ones with perfect results; they’re the ones who planned earlier and made thoughtful choices along the way.

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Letter to a Cadaver: Proof That Silence Can Teach

Letter to a cadaver,

I still remember the first day we’ve met. I felt nostalgic and heavy in a hall full of dead people. I wasn’t sure whether I am about to cut and open up a man who had experienced death. I was just 21 and had never felt, stood or touched anything that close to death.

All of us bowed down on that very day and observed silence for few minutes as a respect to your commitment for our medical education. The feeling that you were loved by someone sometime ago struck my heart very deep.

Despite my curiousity, enthusiasm and eagerness to learn, when my group mates moved the shroud over you, we altogether couldn’t possibly underestand the magnitude of your generiosity and selflessness in donating us your body in to which you have poured whole seventy years of your life with ups and downs and also the very last and only thing that you, truely owned.

Then my professor drew lines on your bear chest and started teaching us. We were told that the best anatomy book is infront of us, awaiting its pages to be turned. When the first incision was made on your bear skin, I felt a shiver running through my spine. I still ponder over whether it was because of the scalpel cutting you open or my hands touching your bear skin for the first time.

Day by day after each and every dissection class, I felt myself gradually brimming with awe, fascination and wonder. Little by little I felt you and your subject transforming me in to a person I have never known. I started reading textbooks and recollecting anatomical relationships instead of prayers before bedtime. I had a roommate constantly complaining me that I was muttering anatomical terms in sleep. I had bones piled up on my work desk and even nicknamed a human skull.

I became a fact-devourer and insidiously I started believing in explainable over unexplainable since I had been down inside your chest and held your heart in my palms. I cut your skull to see your brain inside and in all that I felt that your body is a house in which your soul had once resided. There was nothing left of real you or any part of your virtuous soul anywhere. It was gone, perhaps now in a new home in heaven.

I know not how to be thankful for allowing to discover, explore and learn everything in your earthly home which you have never seen yourself to people whom you have never met, seen or talked in real life. You had no place of yourself there uncut by our novice,unskilled scalpels.

Thank you very much.

Hoping to visit your new home when my time comes,

With lots of love and appreciation,

A dental student.

By Vishva Dissanayake.