i hope you guys enjoy, my cursive has improved ten folds over the past 3 months, and due to these tips it’s gotten way better. i’m still practicing but these tips really helps for me, i hope it does for you too
4. May is AP Exam season! What are your tips for studying for tests?
May Study challenge by nkbstudies
1. Make review sheets at the end of each unit. By the end of the semester, these will pile up and you can look back @ summaries of the entire year. Here’s a quick way to create one, s/o to my Math teacher.
2. Flash cards. Ofc this one is obvious, BUT instead of just defining the term, try to get the term by the definition, work backwards!
3. Clean/organize/create a new layout for your study. This’ll help to not only distract you but motivate you bc everything will look nice now. It’ll also give your brain a new place to work at.
4. Practice Worksheets. A lot of you like to rewrite your notes (and so do I!) but another thing that is similar and works well is creating mini worksheets and working on them whenever you can. Whenever I know that I’m going to get these say like four questions wrong, I would make worksheets of about 10 questions and add these ones in them, sometimes worded differently. I do them whenever I have a spare moment, such as on the way home, during lunch break, at homeroom. This forces me to think and eventually causes me to remember them. Try to pick problems that you know for SURE are on the test!
@danielledesireexoxo
Questioning if you might be autistic? Have you always known you were different and are trying to figure out why? Is professional diagnosis not an option for you (cost/stigma/bias/etc)? Then here is a list of resources to help you figure out if you are autistic.
This post is broken up into categories of resources based on subject matter. Some links may contain ableism and medicalized language but if they do they also have useful information which is why they were posted.
Self-diagnosis is a long process of reading and researching and self-reflection. A decision should not be made overnight. However, it is completely valid to self-diagnose as autistic (see the second to last section for more on this). If you are self-diagnosing, read as much as you can written by autistic people. Read their blogs and their tumblrs. Read about the autistic experience. Talk to autistic people if you are able to.
If you have questions, feel free to submit them to @askaboutautism, a blog run by autistics to answer questions about autism.
What is Autism?, in Plain Language
What is Autism?
What is Autism?
The Dictionary of Autism
Myths About Autism
Ask an Autistic (video series)
DSM-V criteria
ICD-10 Criteria
ASD Checklist
DSM Criteria for Autism Explained
Positively Autistic: A List of (Positive) Autistic Traits
ASAN’s About Autism (With Characteristics)
Inclusive Autistic Traits
Simplified ASD Diagnostic Criteria
Revised Alternative Autism Criteria (criteria written by an autistic person)
Childhood Traits (this is from the CDC and is very medicalized)
I Think I Might Be Autistic
Autism Screening Quizzes
Musing of an Aspie’s Adult Diagnosis Series
What is Stimming?
Stimming 101, or: How I learned to stop Worrying and Love the Stim
Types of Stimming
A List of Stims
The High Cost of Self-Censoring (or Why Stimming Is a Good Thing)
What is Sensory Processing Disorder? (video)
Adolescent and Adult SPD Checklist
SPD Resource Center
Understanding Sensory Processing Issues
Masterpost: Sensory Differences
Sensory Sensitivities and Atypical Sensory Processing series
How to Reduce Sensory Overload
Processing a Sensory Overload
What Does a Meltdown Feel Like?
“Shutdown”- What it is and What it Isn’t
Where I go When I Shutdown
Anatomy of a Meltdown
Shutdown: A Specific Type of Meltdown
What’s so Special About a Special Interest?
Special Interests
How Do I Know For Sure What My Special Interests Are?
What are Special Interests? (video)
Examples of Special Interests
Autism and Special Interests
Executive Dysfunction
Executive Dysfunction vs. Procrastination
Executive Function Series
The “Joys” of Executive Dysfunction
3 Symptoms of Executive Dysfunction
Executive Dysfunction
What is Alexithymia? (video)
Alexithymia Question
Emotional Dysfunction: Alexithymia and ASD
Alexithymia Questionaire
My Stance on Self-Diagnosis
ASD Paper Diagnosis vs. Self-Diagnosis: Pros and Cons
Yes, Self-Diagnosis Can Be Valid
Autism Self-Diagnosis Is Not Special Snowflake Syndrome
The Myth of “Official”: Autism and Self-Diagnosis Skeptics
(This is certainly not a comprehensive list of autistic bloggers. If you have any suggestions of blogs that should be added, feel free to message me)
Autistic Hoya
Autistic Women’s Network
The Caffeinated Autistic
A Heart Made Fullmetal
Musings of an Aspie
Neurowonderful
Non-Speaking Autistic Speaking
Ollibean
A Quiet Week In The House
Radical Neurodivergence Speaking
StrangerDarkerBetter
Thinking Person’s Guide to Autism
The Third Glance
Unstrange Mind
We Are Like Your Child
Yes, That Too
Step 1: begin at the beginning
read the title
get excited for cool science
note the authors
get mad at them for having more papers than you
spend ten minutes wondering if you’d have been better off going to whatever institution they’re at
die a little inside
Step 2: the abstract and introduction
read the abstract
skip right to the introduction because you’re not completely sure what they’re talking about and maybe that will clear it up
alright now we’re talking
understand the entire first paragraph of the introduction
mostly get the second and third paragraphs
skip over the technical bit at the end because boring
Step 3: the results (aka the good stuff)
read the first paragraph
really not get what’s being said
skip right to figure 1
read the figure caption
call it good, you got the jist
repeat for the remaining figures
Step 4: give up
this paper really isn’t answering the question you had in the first place
you’ll just cite it later it’s fine
Step 5: keep doing science!
fail because of some unexpected and puzzling problem
spend 2-6 weeks troubleshooting and getting nowhere
decide to do another literature search to see if anyone else has had this issue
find the same paper you read before cited a bunch
Step 6: reread
actually like read it this time
get to the end
find the answer to your question
die a little inside
wonder why you didn’t just read it fully to begin with and save yourself weeks of work
Step 7: follow citations to another paper that looks relevant
repeat entire cycle
wonder why science is so hard
Cleansed ♡
The day I met my solemate
Has anyone ever been in this building?