I know I'm resurrecting an old thread, but I too have just started a Principles of Microeconomics course this summer and wanted to see if anyone else had any other advice or resources. I'm currently working through Hazlitt's "Economics In One Lesson" and Rothbard's "America's Great Depression." (I got about 1/5 of the way through Mises's gargantuan "Human Action," but my schedule got a bit crowded recently and I decided that since it's such a meaty read I wanted to wait until I had more time to devote to it.)
I took a "Money, Banking, and Financial Markets" course earlier this summer, which was a load of Keynesian BS (my favorite quote from my professor was: "And if you'll look at the graphs on page such-and-such in the textbook, it's quite intriguing. We don't really understand it at this point, but there seems to be a mysterious direct link between money supply growth and the inflation rate..." which actually made me laugh out loud in the middle of class.) I ended up skipping half the classes and gave up on reading the textbook ("The Economics of Money, Banking, and Financial Markets" by Frederic S. Mishkin, a former Fed governor) about halfway through the course. I probably should have paid more attention so that I could understand Keynsianism better, since it is the primary enemy in this intellectual battle, but, whatever. I did fine on the exams and I took the 7-page paper assignment as an opportunity to make the case for abolishing the Federal Reserve System (my paper actually ended up being 10 pages).
I'm also taking Principles of Macroeconomics simultaneous with my Micro course right now, and already I've had fun with the professor. My Macro prof is big on class participation and he calls on people to comment on things he's saying (to keep everyone involved and make sure they're paying attention), and yesterday he called on me to comment on interest as the price of money. I turned it around and told him that the price of money is however many goods/services that money can be exchanged for, and that interest is really the price of time. Then we got into a little back and forth about liquidity preference vs. time preference, and it ended up with him saying he'd have to get back to me on the subject and that he honestly wasn't sure how to respond.. lol...
But anyways... tips for surviving a Microeconomics Keynes-love-fest college course as an Austrian schooler. Much appreciated.