this is adorable
I thought it was time to show all of you my desk :) I put some personal annotations on it, if you have any more questions you can just send me a message! Anni
- Anonymous
This quote has really resonated with me. I just had to make this and stick it on my vision board. đ
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here are some clips from my post on my studygram and these summary pages took a decade at least oml
summer:
invest in a book of short stories for each language youâre studying, and keep the book(s) on your bedside table. take advantage of the free time while out of school to get in the habit of reading through the short stories whenever you can. just a few minutes of reading the short stories every day will immensely improve your foreign language skills and keep you from forgetting the vocab & grammar over summer break
acquire a list of the books youâll be reading for school in the fall and start reading them. to get the list of books, try asking someone whoâs already taken the class, your future teachers, or a school counselor. reading the books ahead of time will not only put you ahead of the rest of your class by giving you time to work through the material in advance; it will also significantly lessen your workload during the school year.
this applies to the school year as well, but especially when youâre reading books in advance, keep a journal and pen at hand every time you read. write down the major plot points of the section youâre reading, what you like/agree with, what you dislike/disagree with, and one or two quotes that summarize the main themes of the section (make sure you include page numbers!!!!). when school starts & youâre assigned an essay on that book, youâll already have the main points of the book laid out, and lots of great quotesâwith page references!âto use in your essay.
two weeks before school starts:
take a look at your syllabus and get started on your first assignments. if you start now, you can stay at least one week ahead on all of your assignments throughout the year. this is a HUGE lifesaver when something comes up unexpectedly during the school yearâlike getting sick or having to go out of town for a few days at the last minuteâand you donât have time to get homework done, because if youâve done it in advance then you wonât have to worry about falling behind.
get a planner app for your phone. i like egenda, but you can use any app where you input homework assignments in advance and it alerts you at various intervals of time before theyâre due. itâs impossible to get a good grade on an assignment if you forget to turn it in on time, so just alleviate that issue altogether.
throughout the school year:
take notes. have a notebook open in every class, and write down all important names, dates, quotes, formulas, and theorems. write the current date at the top of each page, and have a separate notebook for each subject. if a teacher repeats something more than once in a class, underline it, because those are the things that appear on midterms and finals.
help yourself memorize things by writing essays about them. even if youâre not assigned an essay about a topic, try to write/type two or three paragraphs every week to summarize what youâre learning in a class. writing things in your own words is one of the best ways to remember them, and it will also help you to improve your writing skills. additionally, this should be applied to all subjects, not just literature or history (because even if youâre studying a STEM field and writing isnât a huge part of the curriculum, you should still have the ability to write about STEM concepts in a way that is understandable and engaging).
befriend the smartest person in the class. figure out who always has the right answers and make yourself their ally. be a good friend to them, and then when youâre struggling with a concept, they will either explain it to you orâif they donât know what the explanation is yetâtheyâll help you search for it.
take advantage of indexes. almost all books have one, and they can be lifesavers if you donât know the answer to a question. especially in history class, when there are a bunch of names that are super difficult to memorize. i know this is a pretty basic tip (if you can even call it a tip), but iâve had a lot of friends completely forget about indexes, so this is just a brief reminder. :)
participate in class. this might sound super obvious, but you cannot retain information without discussing it! if youâre like me and participating in class sucks because of social anxiety, try to force yourself out of your comfort zone & remember that you are your own worst critic, but itâs also okay just to discuss things with a close friend or family member instead. the important thing is that youâre repeating what youâve learned out loud and practicing explaining it to someone else, which will really help you to grasp the concepts.
three weeks before midterms/finals:
now is when all of your notes come in handy. go back through the notes for each class and study them, particularly the parts youâve underlined. you shouldnât try to memorize the pages, but you should study them enough thatâby finals weekâyou could summarize the contents if someone asked you pointed questions about them. this is also when it becomes extra helpful to be friends with the smartest person in the class, because they will be an excellent study buddy. just make sure that you reciprocate if you ask them to help you study.
fill in any gaps in your notes by talking to your teachers and attending all of the office hours that you can. many teachers will give you a study guide if you ask for one, and you can literally go through and fill it in with info from your notes. remember, most of your teachers really do want you to do well, and theyâll try their best to help you achieve the best scores possible.
if any of your quizzes are open book, ask your teacher if you can put completely blank sticky notes on pages. bookmark the pages that have important events, quotes, facts, etc., and then if you forget something on a test you can refer to the book & it will be much easier to find the information. personally, the only open book finals iâve had are the kind where you just write three 1000 word essays in 3 hours, but we are required to have at least 5 quotes in each essay, so if thatâs the case for any of you guys then this tip is super helpful for bookmarking those quotes as well.
while taking a final/midterm:
read through the whole test first. figure out how long it is, how much time you have, and how many points each question is worth. if youâre worried about running out of time, start by doing the problems that are worth more points, and then out of whateverâs left do the ones that look easiest first. this will guarantee that you make the best use of your time & get the highest grade possible
and thatâs all i can think of right now! hope this can help at least a few people :)
Hereâs some weapons for your essay writing arsenal!
Hemingway Editor Calmly Writer The Most Dangerous Writing App Purdue O.W.L. One Look Thesaurus JSTOR Google Scholar
Reply with your favourite or other great websites I didnât include!
Taking textbook notes is a chore. Itâs tedious and boring and sometimes challenging, but hopefully these tips will help you improve your skill and shorten the time it takes you to do textbook notes!
Give yourself time: Realistically, you canât knock out 30 pages of notes in 20 minutes. Take your time with textbook notes so theyâre a good studying tool in the future. The general rule is to take how many pages you have to do and multiply it by 5: thatâs how many minutes itâll take you to do the notes.
Also, divide you notes up into manageable chunks to increase your productivity. I am personally a huge fan of using pomodoro timers, and I adjust the intervals for however long I need to.
Skim before you start taking notes: If time is an issue, donât read your 40 page in depth before even picking up a pen, but make sure you know what youâre reading about by skimming a bit ahead of your notes. Read over section titles, and look at charts, maps, or graphs. Writing and highlighting as you read the chapter for the first time isnât effective because you donât know if a sentence will be important or not, so make sure youâre reading a paragraph or section in advance before writing.
Use the format they give you in the book to help take your notes: In a lot of textbooks, there will be a mini outline before the chapter itself that shows all the headings and subheadings. Those will be your guidelines! I find this super helpful because long chapters can be daunting to go into without any structure. If you donât have one of those, use the headings and subheadings provided for you. If you havenât already been doing this, it will help you so much.
Read actively: Itâs so easy to âreadâ a textbook without digesting any information, but that is the last thing you want to do. Not only does it make taking notes a million times harder, but youâll be lost in class discussions because you didnât understand the reading. To keep from passively reading, highlight, underline, star any important information in the book itself.
Have a color coding system for highlighting or underlining and write down a key somewhere (hereâs a few that you can adjust for your needs: x,x)
Use sticky notes or tabs to mark any questions or important points to come back to
Summarize important information and paraphrase: When taking the actual notes, donât copy down full sentences word for word. Not only does writing full sentences waste a lot of time, itâs not an effective way to learn. If you can paraphrase the information, then you understand it. Itâs also easier to study notes which are in your own words instead of textbook academia writing.
Be selective: You shouldnât be writing down every fact that comes up in your textbook. If a fact ties into the bigger topic and provides evidence, then itâs probably something to keep, but you donât need every piece of supplemental information (but do make sure you always write down the vocab). Learn your teacherâs testing style to help you decide what to write down. Could this be on the quiz/test? If the answer is yes, make sure you write it down.
Learn to abbreviate: Just like writing full sentences, writing out full words will waste time. Implement some shortenings (make sure to use ones that youâll understand later!) into your notes. Some common ones are: b/c=because, gov=government, w/o=without, and hereâs a great list of a ton of examples of abbreviations and shortenings.
Answer margin and review questions: A lot of textbooks have margin questions on every page or so that sum up whatâs really important about that information. Make sure not to skip them because theyâre really helpful for understanding. Write them down and answer them clearly in your notes. Most textbooks also have review questions after the chapter that check for reading comprehension, so make sure to answer those because theyâll show you if you really understood the chapter.
Donât skip over visual sources: Maps, diagrams, illustrations, charts, and any other visuals in textbooks are so helpful. If youâre a visual learner, these things will be so essential to you and how you understand what youâre reading. Charts, tables, and diagrams sometimes also summarize information, so if youâre a visual learner it might benefit you to copy those down instead of writing it out.
Add visuals if itâll help you: As said above, copying down charts, tables, illustrations, or diagrams can be super helpful for visual learners. Theyâre clear and concise, so pay attention to them.
Write your notes in a way thatâs effective and makes sense to you: Mindmaps, Cornell notes, or plain outline notes are all really good forms of notetaking. Find which one works best for you to understand them and which one is most effective for your class, and use it (stuff on mindmaps and cornell notes).
Combine your class and textbook notes: If you rewrite your class notes, add in information you think is relevant from your textbook notes. Mark anything both your book and teacher said were importantâyou donât want to forget any of that. If you donât rewrite class notes, then put stars next to anything repeated.
The other day a recruiter asked me about my R experience. I told him about the project I worked on in R (aka the only one) and how, since it has similarities to Python, I could probably pick up new functions and libraries if needed. I even mentioned a specific library I learned about in my course and how certain parts are different in R.
He told me it was refreshing that I was honest and self-aware about my skill level in R. Because heâs had dudes tell him theyâre R superstars only to completely fail the supposedly simple test in R. I wasnât worried telling him this because, letâs be honest, this is an entry-level position for a bachelorâs degree. The recruiter knows this. Thereâs no point in pretending to be an expert. Just make sure you can show that youâre competent.
He also REALLY loved my resume. He even said that my resume made him think, âdamn, I need to step up my gameâ about his own resume. Because itâs easy to read and has everything laid out properly. It is something that recruiters definitely notice when they actually look at your resume rather than just shoving it through an ATS.
the overwhelming grief of losing an entire year to sickness, violence and pandemic fatigue is settling in so id like to remind everyone that: you are not a failure, yes there is still a happy future for you, and wearing a mask is very sexy
Because it comes up a lot for all of us trying to manage schedules that slam more than 24 hours of work into a day, I thought I would make one giant productivity post for everyone to help us all out (including myself).Â
10 steps to GET MORE SHIT DONE in a dayÂ
JUST STARTâI think most of us find that sometimes the hardest part to starting a task is overcoming the âughâfuck this shit, I donât want to do thisâ feeling. So, trick yourself into it. Instead of saying youâre going to work for 8 hours, tell yourself youâll do an hour⌠and watch that hour turn into 2 or 3 or 4 magically.Â
Action fights anxietyâIf youâre terrified of a project hanging over your head, just start it!! Instead of waiting till tomorrow or next week when things might be right, just start right now! Do something to help yourself feel better about it. Youâll feel better getting through the rest of your day if you donât have the fear. If you wake up at 2 am panicked you havenât replied to an email, get up and do it now so you can go back to sleep in peace!
Make a listâNever underestimate the power of writing it down and crossing it off.Â
Take care of yourselfâItâs hard to work when youâre tired or hungry or havenât worked out, etc. So, prioritizeâmake yourself #1! Youâre fucking worth it. So work out, eat breakfast, sleep 6 or 8 or 9 hours (whatever you need). Do whatever it takes to make yourself feel ready to take on the day.Â
Stay organizedâI have a slightly OCD-type personality. If the desk is a mess, itâs hard for me to do my work. So put things back where they belong, take the time to keep things tidy so you can do your best work. Â Â
Donât multitaskâWe all think weâre good at thisâbut the truth is weâre shit. Weâre complete and utter shit at multitasking. Do one thing very well instead of four things poorly.Â
Shut offâTurning away from the work for just a minute can really decrease your productivity. Unless you are actively waiting on a text to hear the test results from your motherâs biopsy or an emergency call from your best friend that your house is burning down almost anything else can wait another hour until you finish your task. Even an email from your boss can probably wait another 10 minutes for you to finish what youâre working on.Â
Be competitiveâBe a better you than you were yesterday. Do more. Show yesterday-you that theyâre a lazy bitch and you can do better!
Refocusâhereâs a list of how to do it in 3 minutes or less.Â
Give a fuck!!âIf you actually care about what youâre doing, youâll be more motivated to do it!
10 very specific ways to get more shit done
Work when you work bestâThis rule that people work better in the morning is bullshit. Some people work best from 5 am to 7 am, but some of us do our best work from 1 pm to 3 pm or 10 pm to midnight. Work when you do your best work and get things doneâwhenever that is!!
LocalizeâPut it all in one place. Stop moving between eight study resources or youâll fail to focus on one thing wellâinstead condense all your study materials into one place and then focus on that ONE thing.Â
Multi-task on the stuff that doesnât matterâIt takes no brain power to clean a counter, so when you have to clean your apartment you can also return the phone calls youâve put off. When you have to stand in line for coffee you can also answer emails, while your lunch is heating in the microwave you can put away the dishes in the dish washer. Get more done in the spaces between.Â
Be contraryâWho says you have to buy groceries on the busiest shopping day? Go at a weird time when other people wonât be there and you can get in and out faster. Donât waste your time waiting in line just because thatâs when everyone else does something. Do things when you can do it fastest!! Hit the post office at 3Â pm when everyone else is at work, go to the gym late in the evening after the post-work rush is over. Do it when you can get it done fast!
Buy the right shitâGo ahead and buy the best tool for the task. If you donât set yourself up right, youâll just spend more time fighting for things to work than actually working!!Â
In armâs reach or screw itâWhen you sit down to work, get all the things you need ready to go so you donât have to keep getting up for more paper or some water. If itâs not within armâs reach, move it or screw it!
Bribe yourselfâNever underestimate the power of a piece of chocolate, or a night out at the end of the week, or an online shopping spree for that shirt youâve wanted.Â
Turn it up (or turn it down)âIf you hate the quiet play music, but if the sound is too distracting shut it the fuck off. Work in a space that works for you.Â
Deep endâwelcome to it--Do the hard stuff first. Youâll lose energy as the day goes on, so leave the easy things for when youâre tired and donât need as much will power.Â
One touchâYouâve probably heard this one before, but hereâs my irreverent version of it. Pick it upâdonât put it the fuck down until youâre done. If you get an email from your professor saying you all have to complete a required form, do the fucking form now and email it back immediately. Why spend more time later having to look at that damn email again? If you realize youâre out of paper towels, check your level of tin foil and tissues while youâre at it so you can go to the store one time. Do it once, do it right, donât fuck around.Â
Oh, and donât forget to give yourself a break when you need it. Not every day can be a day where everything gets done. :)Â
Lately, Iâve been seeing something slightly bothersome around studyblr, and I just want to say something about it. Basically, there seems to be this attitude cropping up (or at least that Iâve seen/heard about more frequently these days) that your grades reflect your level of effort, or that by simply working hard and putting more effort in, your grades will automatically improve. I disagree.
Yes, there are certainly some cases where youâre already proficient in a class and if you just put in the extra time to study, youâd do better. But there are some classes where grades are not a measure of the level of effort you put in, and therein lies my biggest issue with the grading system and these types of studyblr posts in general. This was certainly the case with me in honors physics (so bear with me, because I have a very large point to make with the following anecdote).
Personally, Iâve always had âeasy Aâ classes where I donât have to work hard; my brain and academic strengths simply favor me in that particular subject, so with minimal effort I can still be top in the class. And then I see peers who go in for tutoring every day, who spend hours studying and meeting with teachers, who basically invest 100 times the effort I do⌠and still canât get above a B or C.
This is not to mention people who take classes that are âreachesâ and, accordingly, donât do so well â even though they work hard â because itâs a challenge. Then there are those who take lower level classes but have capabilities beyond that â and donât need to put effort in â thus giving them an unfairly easy A. Does their A mean that they work harder? That theyâre a better student, studier, scholar, intellectual? Hell to the no.
English is one of those âeasy Aâ classes for me. Iâm just innately strong in verbal-linguistic intelligence (going off of Gardnerâs theory of multiple intelligences), so Iâve literally never had to study for English tests or reading comp/writing. But put me in other classes, particularly science classes? Well, thatâs something else entirely.
Guys, I studied my ASS off, for hours at a time. I desperately Skyped people in my class nearly every night to try to understand the homework and spent every lunch block trying to master the material. I met with my physics teacher and tutor all the time and had a dozen anxiety attacks (and I mean actual, diagnosed anxiety attacks) over that one class because I tried harder than Iâve ever tried⌠and I got a B for the whole year. I was the one who dreaded seeing that red number scrawled on my test, who shoved it into my backpack before others could see and blinked back tears, thinking, But I studied so hard!
Physics was a nightmare I was desperate to forget by the end of junior year. But then a couple things happened that shocked me, and I instantly thought of them when I read some of these posts about good effort = good grades.
Now, my physics teacher, who has a reputation for being on the strict side and being a tough grader, has had four teaching assistants (TAs) in five years of teaching. Most science teachers at my school have as many as five a year. At the end of 11th grade, after Iâd scraped by with a B in his class, he asked me if I wanted to be a TA. Out of the entire grade â out of the multitude of students Iâd watched parade past with straight Aâs and âthat test was so easyâ and âI barely studiedâ and âsorry Edye I donât know how else to explain it to youâ â he chose me.
I think I (very graciously) blurted out, âWhat? Why?â because I was so taken aback. He said that I was hardworking and dedicated â that Iâd always gone above and beyond in my studying and meeting with him â and he wanted someone like me to be a TA. I was flattered, and I thoroughly enjoyed being a TA during senior year. (Also, anyone who doesnât think heâs super nice is incredibly wrong. Heâs awesome.)
Two years later, I got to read his college recommendation for me. Bear in mind that I was not, based on my grades, a top student in his class. And this is what he wrote for his opening line:
Honors Physics is a rigorous course that draws from the strongest students in the junior class and Edye proved to be one of those students.
What? He had seen my report card, right? I got worse grades than all of my friends. I got a goddamn 66 on a test in that class, my all time low. He continued:
One of the many examples of Edyeâs commitment [is when she] had been ill and missed quite a bit of school and consequently had a lot of school work to make up in all of her classes. Â Many students in this situation would take one or more classes pass / fail for the quarter; Edye would not take the pass/fail option and insisted she complete all the work and complete it with the grade she would earn. Â She did in fact complete all of the work and with a B-. Â A remarkable accomplishment considering she kept current with her studies while making up all of the missed work.
He called a B-minus âa remarkable accomplishment.â Did he say âtoo bad she didnât put enough effort in, which was reflected in a B-minusâ or âshe only got a B-minus, so I guess she didnât try hard enoughâ? No, he praised the amount of effort I put in, even though I didnât even get a âgoodâ grade.
Iâm hardly one to knock putting in effort, but what bothers me is that this attitude, that effort = good grades, has the potential to make people feel bad. To feel like if they arenât acing a class even though theyâre studying harder than anybody else, well, they just arenât trying hard enough. Yes, grades are important. So is effort. But they are not always directly correlated. As is evidenced by my story, sometimes people who get lower grades have worked even harder then those who got high grades. And, if theyâre lucky, this will be acknowledged. (I can certainly attest that while Iâve been praised by English teachers for my writing skills and intellect, theyâve never singled me out for putting in an exceptional amount of effort. They know that while Iâm proactive and responsible, I donât try super hard because, well, I donât really need to in order to get a good grade.)
Encourage other students to put in a reasonable amount of effort; recommend different study methods. But donât tell them that good effort = good grades. Teach them to measure their success by looking at how productive theyâre being, how proactive they are in reaching out for help, how dedicated they are to their education, how resilient they are in the face of obstacles, how committed they are to school. Admire those who refuse to take the easy way out, even if they only get a C. These qualities, which are far more important than a 4.0, just donât always translate directly into good grades.
I dislike seeing this message all over Tumblr, that to get better grades you just have to try harder â which carries with it the implication that if you donât get good grades, itâs because you arenât putting enough effort in â when I know from firsthand experience that this is not always true. I strongly believe in trying to be the best student you can be, rather than trying to be in the top 5%. But in the end, do what works for you. Just take it with a grain of salt.
And to my followers, and anyone reading this⌠please know that, if you work hard regardless of your grades, you are already a model student, and you are absolutely someone I look up to.