Veronica Rodriguez | College Rules
In the age of TikTok and Instagram Reels, attention spans are decaying. Veronica’s digital rule is draconian by modern standards: No social media before 10:00 AM.
She uses apps like Opal or Freedom to block distractions during her "deep work" hours (usually 10:00 AM to 2:00 PM). She also follows a strict "one tab" rule while writing papers—no browsing, no rabbit holes. She knows that the average student loses 2.5 hours per day to "context switching" (checking text messages while reading a textbook). Veronica recaptures those hours. college rules veronica rodriguez
The worst mistake a student makes is writing the paper the night before. Veronica flips the script. Her protocol is a three-pass system: In the age of TikTok and Instagram Reels,
Veronica’s golden rule: Never submit a first draft. Ever. The "rough draft" is for your eyes only. What the professor sees is the third iteration. Veronica’s golden rule: Never submit a first draft
Most students treat the syllabus as a relic—a digital file they close immediately after the professor stops reading it aloud. Veronica Rodriguez does the opposite. Her first rule is psychographic warfare: Know the battlefield before the war begins.
Veronica highlights every due date, every grace period rule, and every extra credit clause. She knows that the professor's rules about late submissions are often negotiable if you ask 72 hours in advance. She knows that participation points aren't just for speaking; they are for strategic speaking.
The Rule: Never ask the professor a question answered on page two of the syllabus. Instead, use office hours to ask questions that reveal depth.