Day 4/100 of productivity: Annotating 'Waiting for Godot' for an essay due in next Tuesday. I hope everyone is having a great week âď¸
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@concentrationandtea
Day 4/100 of productivity: Annotating 'Waiting for Godot' for an essay due in next Tuesday. I hope everyone is having a great week âď¸

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3/100 days of productivity ⢠Wrote out some physics notes today on mechanics đ
2/100 days of productivity: Studying maths with tea! I've been slacking for some time with maths (ahem two or three months haha) so I'm starting to pick up again by doing a few exercises đŞđź
Taking notes on the Cuban missile crisis. 1/100 days of productivity (If you're interested in my desktop wallpaper, give me a shout!)
What to Do When School Gets Hard (for the first time)
Total honesty time: I was a slacker in high school. I donât mean that in the sense that I got bad grades, or that I didnât do extracurriculars. I mean that in the sense that I was the kid who got good grades without having to try, so I never did. Try, that is. This meant that when I got to college, I got a surprise: professors want you to actually study! Like, with the textbook and everything! Needless to say, I had a rough time figuring out how to do this âstudyingâ thing, and I know Iâm probably not alone in this boat. The good thing is, Iâve figured this out, for the most part, so now you can learn from my mistakes.
Assume every class is going to be your hardest, going in. The day you donât assume youâre going to have to put in five hours minimum studying for the first real test in a class is the day you will really regret. Until you get a feel for a certain professor, treat it like itâs super hard.
Schedule in studying time and STICK WITH IT. DO THIS. Or else you will end up like me, making friends with the other lone person who inhabits the study lounge at 1 am. Donât be me, guys.
Never underestimate the power of teaching others. Seriously, I definitely have kinda taken advantage of my classmates, because Iâm the person who tries to explain stuff and writes out the impromptu study guides. By teaching them, though, Iâm actually prepping MYSELF to wreck the curve. Basically, once you know it well enough to explain it to others, youâre golden.
Do ALL the readings. The professor that assigns the most readings is also the professor who expects you to have learned the most from them, in my experience. Also, donât just highlight stuff: write important points that you would want to highlight in your notes. Highlighting is just coloring for grownups - itâs fine, but itâs not going to help you learn. Itâs just going to catch your eye later.
Donât judge a professorâs tests by their lecture style. Imagine: a sweet little 5 foot nothing professor, dressed to the nines every day and super kind to everyone. My professor who fits this description causes about a third of her students to retake her classes every year. Bigshot business guy with a ridiculously high consulting rate and a weird robe he always wears? 98% pass his classes. Focus on the material, not the prof.
Save your homework assignments. It turns out that in college, homework is 95% of the times something that you can actually study from. Do it, do it well, then hang on to it.
Know your preferred study habitats. Do you like to study around a lot of people or by yourself? Are windows a distraction or a necessity? Is the library great or just too far away to bother with? Keep an eye on when you study best and then try to replicate it later.
Get rid of unnecessary distractions. Turn off your phone. Notifications are Bad for concentration. Close your email unless you absolutely need it. Have a drink and someone to nibble on if you use that as an excuse to avoid studying. Maybe avoid studying with that one person if you are distracted by existing near them.
Plan out regular breaks. Tell yourself every half hour you can go on Facebook, or wander down the hall and talk to someone, or read a chapter of that thing youâve been working on. Just have something planned out that you can actively work towards. Not just having an abyss of time to fill with studying can be really useful.
As for studying itself:
Notecards, re-writing notes in a different format, having someone quiz you, making study guides, and writing practice essays about stuff have all been super useful for me in some respect or another.
Other studying help:
SevenÂ
Study
MoodsÂ
Rain generator
Coffee shop chatter
How to Study
How to Study pt. II
Bullet journal guide
Youâve got this. We can study together.

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Get cracking guys đŞđŞđŞ
Hello, it is I, rising from my hiatus to share some wisdom I recently acquired after failing a quadratics review test. Although it may feel like the end of the world, even the best students fail tests, itâs perfectly normal! Itâs impossible to have perfect grades all the time, and these are a few of the things Iâve learned about what steps to take if you should ever happen to fail a test.
Donât panic!
I canât stress this enough!
Like I said, it might feel like the end of the world right now, but donât worry! Everyone gets bad grades and the best thing you can do is accept it. Try to get rid of those initial feelings of disappointment.
You can come back from a bad grade!!
Evaluate what youâve done!
If you can, look over your test paper. What were your weaknesses? What were you good at?
Were you as prepared as you could be for this test?
Was this your best work?
Are your goals realistic?
Listen to feedback! Read any comments your teacher has written, and if thereâs something you donât fully understand, the best thing to do is ask! That might be intimidating and scary, but your teachers are here to help.
Learn from your mistakes!
A bad grade just shows you that what youâre currently doing isnât very effective for you.
Find what works for you! Try other methods and techniques.
Be proactive!
Get up and do something!!
Talk to your teacher. Arrange extra credit if you can, or arrange to resit the test or rewrite an essay.
This not only helps you prepare for future tests, but it makes you look really good to your professors and teachers! They know youâre trying your hardest to take your learning seriously and they do remember!
Ask for extra practice questions or arrange to go over the material with them during a free period or after school.
Work hard! In some cases you may need to take on extra work to make up for a bad mark but I promise itâs worth it!
Resitting a test
Put as much effort into preparing for a retest as you know you should have given the first time around.
Study smarter! Try new techniques, find your learning style.
Donât lose sleep to study! This might be really hard depending on your workload but your body will thank you for it and it is so much better to do a test well rested.
This applies for any test! Sleep well!
Remember, no one became successful without failing first! Keep your head up, you can do this!
This is my advice, it is by no means gospel! Feel free to add to this with your own ideas :)
- emily
April is here!!!! my favorite warmer-weather month!! here is my April task list, April calendar, and my first week of April! I havenât ever done a full page calendar like this but decided to try it out, inspired by @studytildawn and my weekly spread is all fit onto two pages which is a first!! Iâm trying to condense my journal a bit, until now I have been making a homework spread for each week but I decided to take that out and buy a mini (!!!) notebook for homework! Iâll post updates about that too!!
Small things to improve your life
change your bedding each month wake up early (at least before 8am) spend time with friends fairy lights everywhere wash your face daily moisturize regularly bake some treats donât wear any make up clean your room at least every two weeks run outside get a new towel regularly invest time in cooking awesome meals discover new music spend less time online take your vitamins eat lots of fruit light some scented candles only go to bed to sleep (chill on the sofa) open your roomâs windows have hot showers
Dear all in education:
You will make it through and you will do great
Donât give up
I believe in you
Try, try and try again
Donât stress too much
I know lots of you will have exams, coursework, assignments, mock tests, revision and whatever else they set these days to be doing/to prepare for. So I wish you all the luck in the world and I hope you arenât too stressed!

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How I Format and Use Flashcards
1. Â Less is More: no need for a paragraph to define a term, choose the simplest and most efficient one. Also, donât include common sense things or things you know by heart, youâll waste time and space by writing them down.
2. Sketch it Out: Sketches can be helpful in allowing you to visualize the term/concept.Â
3. Say it Out Loud: When reviewing through the cards, try and say the definition out loud. It will require you to think about it more, and it also helps with memorization. If I try and define a term in my head I usually speed through it and leave something out.Â
4. Write them as you go: Donât sit down right before finals and try and write down every term/definition from the course. It takes forever and you will kill your hand. As you finish a chapter in the course finish that set of flashcards. You will thank yourself later.Â
5. Repetition: I go through my flashcards before a test maybe a thousand times (exaggeration but very close). Remember to focus on the harder ones, youâll most likely remember the easier ones during the test.Â
Here is my method:
Round 1: Go through every single card. Donât set any aside. I usually donât know a majority of the terms at this point, I most likely just finished writing them down.
Round 2: Go through every card again, this time setting aside ones I didnât know or had trouble with.
Round 3: Go through the harder ones I missed.
Round 4: Add the harder ones back in with the original and shuffle.
Round 5: Go through them all and repeat the process until pleased!
hey guys! Back by unpopular demand: me, with another printable. Â I have my first physics exam of the semester on Monday, and Iâm determined to do well. Â So I made this little printable to get myself organized re: the millions of equations I have to understand.
For most classes, you wonât have to actually memorize formulas and equations. Â But you will be expected to understand what they mean and how to use them. Thatâs where this formula sheet comes in. Â Laying out each equation will help you see how they relate to each other and which situation to use each equation in.
Use this sheet for any class that involves a lot of formulas: physics, chemistry, math, statistics, underwater basket weaving, etc.
download here! [ 9 rows | 12 rows | 15 rows ]
General Tips for Studying for Math or Physics
Make a list of all the topics that will be on the exam. Â Circle or highlight the ones that have been the most difficult for you. Â Focus your time on these topics instead of spending too much time reviewing the easier topics.
Use the formula sheet printable to organize all of the equations you have to deal with.
Go over old homework, focusing on all the problems you got wrong.
If your teacher has posted review problems, work on those. Â If not, find extra practice problems in your textbook or online. Â The best thing you can do is practice, practice, practice.
Make a cheat sheet (not to, you know, actually cheat. Â Just a sheet or mind map that organizes all the major topics and details. Â Make it as pretty as you want.)
Do more practice problems.
Sleep (super duper important!!) and eat a good breakfast. Â Youâve got this.
The view heređ
Notes to myself on how to become a better person this summer.
Wake up and open your curtains. Your windows too.
Drink some tea or coffee, whatever pleases you. Notice every sip.
Have some fresh fruit and finish breakfast feeling full.
Stand outside and feel the air. Cool or warm, it will make you feel real.
Get some exercise. Yoga to soothe, running to breathe, lifting for strength.
Take care of your body. Have a nice shower and pamper as much as you want afterward.
If youâre going to work, remember you have the chance to make anyoneâs day or to ruin it. Act accordingly.
Weed out the bad language. Itâs only creating tension in your body and mind. Kind words are infinitely more appreciated.
Take some time each day to improve your mind. Keep reading that great book. Listen to an incredible piece of music. Practice an instrument or a skill. The progress is its own reward.
Pictures will help you remember how wonderful life is. But spend less time on your phone and more time seeing the world face to face.
Go to sleep knowing that you have done well. Tomorrow is there with room to become even better.
5.4.16 | Tuesday I decided to start a new (thinner) bullet journal so that itâll take lesser space in my school bag. Schoolâs finally starting next week, I donât even know how to feel about this- new environment, new school, new friends!

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MARCH MASTERPOST MADNESS PT IÂ as part of a follower milestone and celebrating spring break, i present to you march masterpost madness: a series of masterposts/guides on studying by yours truly!! first up we have math & how to study for it!!
i love math so much it looks like i spend almost all my free time doing it. anyway, i got a few requests asking me how to study best for math and about resources, so i thought itâd be best to start off with this one!!
SO, HOW DO I STUDY FOR MATH?
practice, practice and practice!! this is so important, omg. math is heavy on problem-solving, and most problems require analytical thinking and application of logic â the best way to hone these skills is through plain practice! besides, once you get used to math questions, you find them less intimidating and you get faster and more accurate at solving them! i suggest using practice books (your textbook should be a good starting point) or finding problems online (Khan Academy is great!). A pro tip is to look around your school community (ask teachers, students, librarians) for practice books â most of them will gladly lend you a book theyâve gone through! itâs ideal to practice/do at least one-two questions everyday, or even more! if youâre stuck on a practice problem and have no one to ask to, feel free to ask the mathblrs, wolfram alpha or the internet! (google your question: it has saved me numerous times!!)
pay attention in class!! this is definitely recommended, but itâs really not a must. if you donât have a strong aptitude for math, i really urge you to do this! listen actively, you donât have to take note of every word the teacher/lecturer says, but do listen to the most important parts! when a teacher emphasizes something, pay extra attention to that (but donât leave out any parts of the chapter!).
RESOURCES
CALCULATORS
scientific calculator!
graphing calculator!
solve circles!
calculate a logarithm!
googleâs scientific calculator!
calculate surds/radicals!
another calculator!
quadratic equation solver!
more calculators!
the best problem solver ever!
NOTES/CHEATSHEETS
algebra I: x, x, x, x
algebra II: x, x, x, x
geometry: x, x
trigonometry: x, x, x, x, x, x, x, x
calculus: x, x, x, x, x, x, x
A FINAL NOTE
remember all your formulas!! know the syllabus!! know how to apply the concepts in problems!! those three things alone will get you to pass â iâm sure!!
try not to cram â study a week (at least) in advance for an exam!! (bigger exams need more prep time!!) an all-nighter wonât do you good!!
always remember, if you fail, you are not a failure!! thereâs always a next time that you can get a better score in!!
Timelapse: taking notes for French literature! This was really fun and got me to stay focused on what I was doing so I may start uploading these on a regular basis. I already have another one of me working on maths so I could put that up later on if youâre interested ^^
Good luck to you if youâre currently studying/revising! You can do it xx