Orange is the happiest color. đđșđ -Frank Sinatra
hey! i made my first graphic!! i hope it helps đ„°
Forget overpriced schools, long days in a crowded classroom, and pitifully poor results.
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Hi everyone itâs my first sharing and iâm so excited hope you like it đ
Hereâs an easy resolution: This stuff is all free as long as you have access to a computer, and the skills you learn will be invaluable in your career, and/or life in general.Â
Chandoo is one of many gracious Excel experts who wants to share their knowledge with the world. Excel excellence is one of those skills that will improve your chances of getting a good job instantly, and it will continue to prove invaluable over the course of your career. What are you waiting for?
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Perhaps no other skill you can learn for free online has as much potential to lead to a lucrative career. Want to build a site for your startup? Want to build the next big app? Want to get hired at a place like BuzzFeed? You should learn to code. There are a lot of places that offer free or cheap online coding tutorials, but I recommend Code Academy for their breadth and innovative program. If you want to try a more traditional route, Harvard offers its excellent Introduction to Computer Science course online for free.
You could use a pre-existing template or blogging service, or you could learn Ruby on Rails and probably change your life forever. Hereâs an extremely helpful long list of free Ruby learning tools that includes everything from Rails for Zombies to Learn Ruby The Hard Way. Go! Ruby! Some basic programming experience, like one of the courses above, might be helpful (but not necessarily required if youâre patient with yourself).
If youâre not interested in coding anything other than fun game apps, you could trythis course from the University of Reading. It promises to teach you how to build a game in Java, even if you donât have programming experience! If you want to make a truly great game, you might want to read/listen up on Game Theory first.
Spreeder is a free online program that will improve your reading skill and comprehension no matter how old you are. With enough practice, you could learn to double, triple, or even quadruple the speed at which you read passages currently, which is basically like adding years to your life.
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Full disclosure: BuzzFeed and other websites are in a partnership with DuoLingo, but they did not pay or ask for this placement.
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UC Berkeley put a stats intro class on iTunes. Once you know how to understand the numbers yourself, youâll never read a biased ânewsâ article the same way again â 100% of authors of this post agree!
Knowing the basics of psych will bring context to your understanding of yourself, the dynamics of your family and friendships, whatâs really going on with your coworkers, and the woes and wonders of society in general. Yale University has its Intro to Psychology lectures online for free.
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Step two: A delightful free voice lesson from Berklee College Of Music.
Step three: Have you always thought you had an inner TSwift? Berklee College of Music offers an Introduction to Songwriting course completely for free online. The course is six weeks long, and by the end of the lesson youâll have at least one completed song.
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Let Stanfordâs Stan Christensen explain how to negotiate in business and your personal life, managing relationships for your personal gain and not letting yourself be steamrolled. There are a lot of football metaphors and itâs great.
If you struggled with math throughout school and now have trouble applying it in real-world situations when it crops up, try Saylor.orgâs Real World Math course. It will reteach you basic math skills as they apply IRL. Very helpful!
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BuzzFeedâs own Katie Notopoulos has a great, simple guide to making an animated GIF without Photoshop. This is all you need to be the king or queen of Tumblr or your favorite email chains.
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Have you never really âgottenâ jazz? If you want to be able to participate in conversations at fancy parties and/or just add some context to your appreciation of all music, try this free online course from UT Austin.
Macalester Collegeâs lecture series is excellent. If youâre more interested in journalism, try Wikiversityâs course selection.
Another invaluable skill that will get you places in your career, learning Photoshop can be as fun as watching the hilarious videos on You Suck At Photoshop or as serious as this extensive Udemy training course (focused on photo retouching).
Lifehackerâs basics of photography might be a good place to start. Learn how your camera works, the basic of composition, and editing images in post-production. If you finish that and youâre not sure what to do next, hereâs a short course on displaying and sharing your digital photographs.
Instructables has a great course by a woman who is herself an online-taught knitter. Youâll be making baby hats and cute scarves before this winterâs over!
If you are lucky enough to have a regular income, you should start learning about savings and investment now. Investopedia has a ton of online resources, including this free stocks basics course. Invest away!
Unf$#k Your Habitat has a great emergency cleaning guide for when your mother-in-law springs a surprise visit on you. While youâre over there, the entire blog is good for getting organized and clean in the long term, not just in âemergencies.â Youâll be happier for it.
Most cities have free community classes (try just searching Google or inquiring at your local yoga studio), or if youâre more comfortable trying yoga at home, YogaGlohas a great 15-day trial and Yome is a compendium of 100% free yoga videos. If youâre already familiar with basic yoga positions but you need an easy way to practice at home, I recommend YogaTailorâs free trial as well.
Itâs simple and just imagine the minutes of your life youâll save!
Iâm reaching the end of my time at university and itâs got me all sentimental. and regretful. There are a number of things that I had learned during my time at university that I wish Iâd known during first year.Â
Read everything. The only valid excuse for not reading everything on the reading list is that you didnât have time, not that you found it boring, or that it wasnât useful. Because thereâs nothing scarier than trying to write an essay on something you studied a month ago, and you have no notes on the topic.Â
Revise constantly. I wish Iâd revisited everything I did a week after I did it, just as a recap. I tended to focus on what I was doing in the moment because it felt the most important thing at the time. Well, during exams, everything is equal. And itâs so frustrating not quite being able to remember something. So, revise. Even just for ten minutes.
Donât spend all of your money on impulse. Iâve bought so much rubbish that I really donât need. And if Iâd saved that money, I could have gone on holiday. Save every last penny you can.Â
Eat well. I just said that you should save all the money you can, but I think that food is one exception to that rule. Try and save money where you can, obviously, but donât go for days and days without fresh vegetables because youâre saving money for a holiday. Your mind, as well as your body, needs food.
Go and talk to professors in their student hours. I used to find this so awkward. To be honest, I still do. But if youâre going sending them an email and asking for clarification on a topic, consider maybe popping into their office when itâs open to students. And tell them if youâre struggling! If you donât let them know, then they canât help you.
Take hot drinks with you, to your lectures or to the library. Donât spend all your money in the library cafe. Bring a flask of tea, and loads of study snacks in a packed lunch box. Trust me on this.
Make time to meet up with friends you havenât seen in ages. Donât wait for them to ask you. I make sure to socialise with my friends at least twice a week. And by socialise, I donât mean getting blind drunk and going clubbing. Sit down and have lunch together. Chat. Get to know each other properly. Friendships formed over alcohol never last as long as friendships formed through actual conversation.
Do stuff that the university puts on for students. Join societies. Get involved. One of the best nights I ever had at university was a masquerade ball that my college put on. And for some reason, Iâve never done anything like that since then? And I donât understand why! University is for making memories, and I donât really have many!
Travel around your university town. If youâre university is on a campus, donât let your life revolve around that one place. If youâve travelled away from home to go to university, then make it worth your while! See the sights, be a tourist, get on a bus and go to a random town and buy ice cream.Â
Experiment. This is the time. Dye your hair blue, join a weird and random society and take up a hobby youâd never dreamed of.  If you want to try drugs, make sure itâs a safe environment and do your research before hand. If you donât want to do that kind of thing, then donât judge other people for doing so.
Give yourself a day off per week. When youâre at university and youâve got loads of work, itâs tempting to just work constantly - or at least, to work every day, if not all the time. But itâs so much better for your mental state to take a day off to just relax.Â
Keep up with your chores. When youâre stressed about an assignment, you donât want to be also stressed about that pile of washing up accumulating by the sink. Keep your room tidy too - clear space, clear mind.
Be kind to everyone. Youâre going to meet a lot of people at university, some youâre going to hit it off with immediately. But there will be some who really rub you up the wrong way. Donât worry about it, itâs completely fine to not like someone. But donât be mean to them. This isnât high school, youâre all here to learn and thereâs just no need to make them feel bad about themselves. Itâs just petty and childish.
Think about the future. I know that youâre completely wrapped up in your university life right now, but youâre going to have to venture out into the real world at some point. Do things that might help your future career: volunteer, get a job, join a sports club, make connections. University isnât, sadly, forever.
There you have it! The advice that I would have given myself in the first year of university. Whether youâre just about to start university, or whether youâre just about to leave, I hope this is useful to you.
Cary Elwes + tummy
âą reorganize the furniture in your bedroom
âą clean your room
âą delete apps, contacts, etc from your phone that you no longer need or use
âą change your phone wallpaper
âą take your journal to a spot youâve never been to around town // spend time reflecting while there
âą sell or donate a few clothes you havenât worn in a year (or even half a year)
âą make a list of your goals // pin it to wherever youâll see it most often to remind yourself where youâre headed
I was going through some old papers from freshman year and I was thinking about what I was doing wrong when I didnât achieve the grades I wanted, even though I got As in my classes. What things could I have done better to get a 100 instead of a 96? I donât ask myself this so much as to be a perfectionist (even though I am one). I ask myself these questions because: 1) I must not have had a completely solid understanding of the material if I couldnât get a 100 on it. 2) Maybe my less-than-stellar test-taking skills got in the way. 3) Iâm a tutor, so I want to be sure I understand everything thoroughly enough to help others with the material.
I may add to this later, so you can always check out the original post here. As always, feel free to comment or message me if you want to add something to this list!
General:
Donât simply read over your notes to study. It doesnât work. You might pick up pieces here and there or even memorize certain things verbatim, but reading something 20 times is very inefficient. Your brain learns by making connections, so if youâre only straight reading the material youâre not making extra connections. Youâre much better off going through your notes to make your own questions and quizzing yourself on them, marking down connections as you read (either in the margin or by literally connecting them in the text with a pen), or creating a study sheet (whether in text format or a mind map).
Donât simply highlight, either. While there is a proper way to highlight, most people I see using a highlighter are doing it wrong. If youâre the person who highlights 90% of the paragraph, Iâm talking about you. Okay, so highlighting is physically more active than glancing over your notes 20 times, but itâs about equally as effective if youâre highlighting everything. I recommend instead highlighting (or marking with eraseable pencil) things you want to go back to later. But, again, highlighting and reading alone is not useful. Go back to your highlighted parts to reread something that was hard to understand the first time, a topic you want to revisit to make a review sheet, etc. Whatever you use it for, make sure the purpose is to quickly find information later, not simply so you can read those things again. Try making a study sheet, in your own words, based off of your highlighting.
Donât forget to write things down. And I donât mean just in your planner when you have homework or papers due. This isnât so much about getting absolutely everything down in terms of notes, either, I have a separate post regarding that. But in class you should always write down questions you have and the answer. If you donât get a chance to ask during class, ask ASAP whether itâs directly to your teacher or asking a classmate. If itâs that important, do some research on it, too. Also, make sure you write down information on due dates or paper topics. You probably already do that, but I would recommend having a piece of paper with you every day where you can write anything important down like dates and to-dos to organize all in one shot. If you simply write down âpaper dueâ in a block in your planner before rushing to the next you may not see that reminder until close to the due date. I like to take all of the information on the piece of paper (which also has my day planned out and a to-do list) right when I get up in the morning so Iâm prepared for the day and donât forget anything.
What I Did Wrong:
Donât take it easy at the start of the semester. To be perfectly honest, Iâve pretty much always done that, but my freshman year of college it wasnât a huge deal since I pretty much already took those classes. Sophomore year, however, everything was new, so memorization and understanding didnât come quite as easily. The harder your classes are, the more essential this is, especially if you actually want to sleep during finals week. The best thing you can do is start doing work before the semester even starts if you have a syllabus handy, or even just looking through your books to see whatâs ahead. While everyone else is doing fun things the night of that first day, make sure you get some work done first before you have your fun. This sets the tone for the rest of the semester and gets you into the habit of working. Donât let yourself get behind! Itâs easier to stay ahead than it is to struggle catching up.
Donât leave your notes to rot after class. Meaning, do something with them right after class! ⊠or at least ASAP. Mark them up, edit them, rework them, copy or type them (if your handwriting sucks like me), or, best of all, write a short summary. Take the several pages of notes you have and condense them into one or two paragraphs. Donât worry about the details, just make sure youâre hitting on the key points. As a bonus, you can type up some questions based off of your notes to save for later studying (details are allowed here). Everything will be fresh, making this a much easier process than if you did it right before the test. At the end of the week, make a summary of your summaries and quiz yourself on the questions you made. Youâll probably want to use those questions again, so try to reword them or even combine them into bigger questions that cover many topics. That way youâre being active with the material and will actually understand what youâre answering as opposed to parroting.
Donât make study sheets by copying off of something else. Yes, I made this mistake. I wasnât copying initially, but rather, using a review book as a reference to make study sheets. However, the more I was pressed for time the less I started putting things into my own words. Now, this wasnât a big deal in terms of legality, since I kept them to myself, but it didnât turn out to be all that helpful in the end. If you want to make study sheets, you could either take concepts youâve been learning and put them together in different ways or make a summary in your own words. I recommend both, but whatever you do, make sure youâre actually creating something new or else youâre not going to remember it. For example, in organic chemistry I took the reactions and grouped them in different ways (by subtstrate, reactants, products, etc.) as a reference while studying. The act of sorting and looking through the reactions in order to make the sheets helped me remember them, then I had the sheets to look at while doing practice to help me memorize them further.
Donât save the bulk of lab work for after the lab and donât wait to write your report. By this Iâm referring to the post-lab report. Spend the extra time while prepping your pre-lab materials to start your report! Youâre expected to know the theory behind your labs before you perform them, so writing the introduction to your report should not be a problem. If it is, then youâll be glad you took the time to understand the lab before you tried actually doing it. By doing this you may also find that you have questions that can be answered by the professor before you get confused in the middle of a procedure. Also make sure you have data tables prepared (not just in your notebook, but in the report file to fill in after) and anything else youâll need to take down data. Once the lab is finished do the report immediately. Everything you did will be fresh and youâll be glad you finished it well ahead of the deadline. At this point you can show your lab to your professor and get any corrections fixed so youâre ashooinâ for an A!
Donât try to write a paper in one shot. I understand if you feel like your papers flow better if you do it all in one shot, but at least make sure you plan it out thoroughly ahead of time before you actually write it all out. But even then, you will likely benefit from splitting your paper into chunks to tackle one day at a time. If you have a research paper thatâs double-digit pages then youâll be forced to do that anyway, but be sure youâre splitting up the work for small papers, as well. It may not seem like a big deal to do a short paper in one day, but if you end up having other assignments or tests due around the same time it might up your stress if youâre crunched for time trying to finish that âinsignificantâ paper while juggling a few other assignments as well as some test prep.
Advice Suggested By Others:
Donât listen to distracting music while studying. To some degree, the types of music that are considered âdistractingâ vary when it comes to the subject youâre studying and personal preference. However, the general rule of thumb is that you avoid any sort of music with lyrics if youâre studying a subject that involves language. Art, math, and certain sciences are an exception if youâre working with pictures or numbers, since language usually doesnât interfere with those things in the brain. But if youâre reading anything, even if itâs worded directions to a math or science problem, lyrics will probably be distracting. Some people suggest that listening to new music with lyrics is okay because you wonât be tempted to sing along with something you donât know while others get distracted by hearing any type of language. Again, itâs truly up to you, but genres such as classical, jazz, and nature sounds are usually recommended. Heck, if youâre a musician and get distracted by any type of music, silence or brown noise may be the better option for you. (Suggested by aslongasitsfiction)
Donât study in bed. Scientific studies have shown that doing anything in your bed that isnât sleep or sex-related affects your ability to fall asleep in your bed. When your brain primarily associates your bed with sleep, itâs much easier to fall asleep. But having trouble sleeping in your bed isnât the only part of the problem. While studying in your bed is really comfy, youâre also more likely to fall asleep if the association with sleep is strong enough. Itâs generally recommended that you donât even study in the same room as your bed, but as college students this may not be possible if you want to use your desk. So if you donât want to make the trek out to a more secluded study space, at least try to make sure your desk doesnât have your bed in view. Because letâs be honest, if youâre exhausted, simply seeing your bed might be enough to make you nod off. (Suggested by rare-footage and ane-mia)
Donât go on tumblr. Okay, this may seem obvious, but sometimes a reminder is all you need to get off your computer! I suppose itâs better that youâre looking up information to help you study, but I think we both know what the better choice would be. (Suggested by oneofakindgizibe)
Donât study in a place you canât focus just because your friends are there. Us humans are social animals. We like being around other people. But this can cause you problems if youâre trying to study. Unless youâre in a productive study group, make sure you separate study time and social time. Youâre probably more likely to gravitate towards fun, social things over studying, so make sure studying is a priority and you get it done before seeing your friends. If you have a roommate or two, then your dorm room is probably not the right place to study. Find a few of your focus hotspots and go there for your study time. (Suggested by fitspoforever)
Donât forget the little things you know youâll need. This includes but is not limited to things such as chargers, books, snacks, and water. You donât want to be in-the-zone and all of the sudden realize you need to run back to your dorm room to get a book. And then 10 minutes later realize youâre hungry and need to run to the cafeteria. If you donât already have certain things that are always in your bag, simply keep a list of things you generally need to bring with you, leave it as a reminder on your desk, and check it over before you hit the library. (Suggested by fitspoforever)
Donât take naps while studying without setting an alarm. Or even better, avoid naps all together. If youâre like me, 15-minute naps usually turn into 2-hour events. But regardless, if you need to get some extra sleep, get the extra sleep. Itâs better to take a nap when you know you need it as opposed to falling asleep on your desk unexpectedly when you have a paper you need to get done for the next day. 15-20 minutes the recommended time for a short nap, but if you need something more robust, try for 90 minutes or use sleepyti.me to figure out the right time to wake up. (Suggested by fitspoforever)
Donât wear uncomfortable clothes. I personally find that âdressing for successâ works really well for going to lectures and virtually everything else, but terribly if youâre hitting the library for a long study session. Youâll probably wanna look cute if youâre heading somewhere public, but just make sure youâre comfortable. Yoga pants are fine for the occasion! (Suggested by fitspoforever)
In light of the amount of schools/colleges being shut down globally thanks to the corona virus/covid-19, I thought a little info graphic could be of use to people!Â
*click for better quality!
so i had a couple weeks where my motivation just⊠seemed to have taken time off. these 5 tips are those that helped me the most when i couldnât seem to bring myself to start studying. i hope theyâre helpful to others as well!
have a ritual
iâll bring myself as an example: before i study i always follow these steps, in this order: i clean the desk, even if the books i need are already there, i clean it; i take a glass of water and a small plate with some almonds and œ chocolates; i get a timer for the pomodoro technique (iâll talk about this later); i brain dump (iâll talk about this too); start a playlist; take a deep breath, sit down, and actually start. now, this is mine, it doesnât have to be yours, but it was to help you understand. when youâre on the couch with your phone and you just donât want to start an afternoon of studying, just⊠try the first step. clean that desk. then get the glass of water. and from then on it will be easier and easier to actually get to it. the important thing is to start.
start small (the pomodoro technique)
if you feel that your brain just⊠refuses to focus on that textbook, donât strain it. start small. if youâve never heard about the pomodoro method, i suggest you look it up online, iâll try to explain it briefly: all you need is a timer; you study for 25/30 minutes, get a 5/10 minutes break in which you get up, go to the bathroom, drink, do a mini-workout⊠then you start again. it really helps if the idea of sitting at your desk for ours makes you want to vomit. if even 25 minutes seems too much, donât worry. study for 5 minutes. have a break. try studying for 10 minutes. but maybe you wonât even need to do that: like i said before the important thing is to start. just that will set your brain in motion, and it will actually be harder to stop.
brain dumping
this simple tip has really helped, maybe more than all the others i name here. you have a lot of thoughts rushing through your mind that you just canât lock away so you can start focusing on that homework? brain. dump. just grab your planner, your bujo, a random piece of paper, and write down whatâs on your mind without worrying about the form. just write. write until your mind is blank. then try to start again.
give yourself a reward (ifâŠthen)
it can be a small thing like âif i finish this maths equation iâll eat a candyâ or a larger-scale thing like âif i study this chapter iâll watch another episode of my favourite tv showâ. our brain tends to choose the path that requires less effort and gives a bigger reward. but facing a task knowing thereâs a reward at the end might help make it seem more effortless.
just donât wait to âfeel like itâ
because sometimes you just never will. you will never âfeel likeâ spending an afternoon studying a subject you hate. but you have to do it anyway, so⊠try your best to make it pleasant. study in your favourite spot, listen to your favorite instrumental piece, buy a nice notebook so itâs easier to actually open it⊠but you have to start. just start. thatâs really the hardest part. i promise itâll get easier from there.
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