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@owlscholar
If you like my content you should head over to @glaucoos on inatagram!! I'm slightly more active there!!

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20 Common Interview Questions, What They Really Mean, and How to Smartly Answer Them
This is a sheet given to me by my collegeās business department and I thought it was helpful so Iāve typed it up fr you guys. All credits to my college business department.
1.Ā Tell me about yourself.Ā What it means: What are your career goals for the next 1-3 years/5-10 years?
This question might come in different forms, but it is the most often asked question in interviews, especially at the start. Ā Have a short statement prepared that describes a little about your past, a lot about your present, and a little about your future that essentially answers the question, āWhy are we sitting across from each other and talking today?ā Be careful that it does not sound rehearsed and be sure you sound excited about the opportunity and fully engaged. Ā Limit your answer to relevance with the interview. Talk about things you have done that relate to the position you are interviewing for and show strategy in your thinking that led you to this interview. Ā Start with the item farthest back, work up to the present and touch on the future. Let the recruiter know how this position ties into the career map you have planned. Set the footing to shift from a mundane interview into impactful dialogue.
2.Ā How did you choose this line of work?Ā
They are looking for people who are strategic and apply critical thinking to decisions. Have a good answer ready, showing passion for the field.
3.Ā Why did you leave your last job? or Why do you want to leave your job? or What did you enjoy/not enjoy about your last job?Ā
Stay positive regardless of the circumstances. Ā Donāt refer to a major problem with management and never speak ill of supervisors, co-workers or the company. Ā If you do, you will be sullied. Ā Keep smiling and talk about leaving for a hopeful, forward-looking reason (i.e. chance to make an impact, use skills, etc.).
4.Ā What experience do you have in this field? or Why should we hire you? or Give me an example from your experience or education that shows your readiness for this role.Ā
Speak about specifics that relate to the position for which you are applying. Ā If you do not have specific experience, get as close as you can (aka make it up). It is critical that you prepare by unpacking your brain, and know how to tie your experiences/skills to the position description. Give them your best pitch and smile!
5.Ā What do co-workers/former employers say about you?Ā
Be prepared with a quote or two. Ā Either a specific statement or a paraphrase will work. Ā āJamal Clark, a colleague at Smith Company, always said I was the hardest worker heād ever known.ā It is as powerful as Jamal saying it at the interview himself. Trouble answering this? Ask former colleagues and professional friends for their opinions!
6.Ā What do you know about our firm? or Why do you want to work for us? Or Why do you want the job?Ā
These questions are the primary reason to do research on the organization before the interview. Ā Find out where they have been and where they are going. Ā What are the current issues? Who are the major players? Can you get behind their mission? Crucial research includes reviewing their āAbout Usā webpages, googling current events where they were involved, and looking on Glassdoor.com to get the scoop on positive things their employees are saying. This takes thought and should be based on the research you have done on the organization as a whole plus a mention of the specific position. Know that job description very well! Sincerity is extremely important. Relate response to long-term career goals. A flat answer here may end the interview, so be prepared.
7. What kind of salary do you need?Ā
Itās a loaded question and a thorny game that you will probably lose if you answer first. Ā So, try not to answer it. Instead, consider discussing how the experience this opportunity offers is the main compensation you are seeking. Or, if you want the conversation to unfold, try, āWhat is the pay range someone with my skill set and degree could expect for this position?ā In some cases, the interviewer will tell you. Ā If not, say that it can depend on the details of the job and ask if you can discuss at a later stage in the interviewing process so you more fully understand the responsibilities of the position. If the interviewer presses, be sure you have done your research on appropriate salaries and give a $7k pay range that makes sense for your lifestyle, your experience, your location, and the position. Use salary.com, Glassdoor.com and Bureau of Labor Statistics to do your research.
8.Ā Provide an example of your ability to think quickly and clearly on your feet.Ā
Companies are looking for innovative thinkers who do not need to be coddled and who truly are up to the challenges of business, most of which require timely, analytical, and creative people. Have a robust STAR** story ready to address this question.
9.Ā Tell me about a time when you helped get a team focused and led them to success.Ā
You are, of course, a team player, right? Be sure to have examples ready: specific stories that show you often perform for the good of the team rather than for personal success are good evidence of your team attitude. Ā Do not brag; just say it in a matter-of-fact tone. This is a key point. Use the STAR** method to stay focused and provide a thorough reply.
10.Ā Are you applying for other jobs?Ā
Be honest but do not spend a lot of time in this area. Ā Keep the focus on this job and what you can do for this organization. Ā Anything else is a distraction.
11. Have you ever been asked to leave a position? I
f you have not, say no. Ā If you have, be honest, be brief and avoid saying negative things about yourself, the people or organization involved. Find the positive spin.
12. What is your greatest strength? Follow Up: Tell me about a time when this professional strength made the difference between success and failure.Ā
Numerous answers are good, just stay optimistic and truthful.  A few good examples: ability to prioritize, work under pressure, solve problems or focus on projects, perhaps professional expertise, leadership skills, positive attitude, reporting skills⦠but be able to prove your reply with a STAR** story.
13. What kind of person would you refuse to work with?Ā
Do not be trivial. It should take disloyalty to the organization, violence, or criminal behavior to get you to refuse to work with a colleague. Ā Minor objections may label you as a whiner. If the version of this question is, āWhat type of person do you prefer not to work with?ā, again donāt be trivial, lengthy, or negative. Focus on discussing your ability to work well with just about anyone.
14. Tell me about a time when you had an idea to improve a process.Ā
They are looking to see that you can (a) take enough ownership to even think about improvements, (b) think creatively and challenge norms, Ā© present enhancements to others with emotionally intelligence, and (d) consider risks of change. Have a great STAR** story!
15. Tell me about a problem you had with a supervisor.Ā
This is a test - If you fall for it and start tearing up an old boss, you failed. Stay positive and either reply that you have not had any trouble with a supervisor if thatās the case, or provide a short STAR** story about how you constructively worked to solve the issue and how your relationship was strengthened as a result. Focus on the happy result!
16. What motivates you to do your best on the job? or What do you expect from your employer?
This is personal - be accurate and honest, yet relevant to the job - but examples for motivation are: Challenge, Achievement, Recognition, Positive Impact, Helping Others. For expectations, you can discuss motivation first and then add something like, āI expect that my employer will communicate her needs clearly so I can drive toward strong results.ā Add anything you deem fitting here, but avoid coming off as entitled or high maintenance.
17. Do you have any blind spots or weaknesses?Ā
Tricky question - Do not reveal personal areas of concern but focus on how you want to grow professionally. In discussing weakness, focus on the BUT, i.e. āIn the past I have put a lot of pressure on myself, but I have been overcoming that as my skills sharpen and challenges lessen.ā
18. Tell me about a time that you had to analyze several solutions to make a sound decision.Ā
This question dives into the ability to create a framework for strategic thinking and proves you have a set process to make good decisions. Tell a STAR** story where the situation is not simple and you can give specifics on the pros and cons assessed, the sources of information tapped into, the info gathered, and insights made to come to a conclusion.
19. How do you stay organized?Ā
Attending to details, planning, organizing, and prioritizing work takes skill. Talk about how you manage your life or work using specific methods, as well as tools you use. You can even provide a STAR** story that speaks to how these qualities led to a success at some point in your life, career, or education.
20. What questions do you have for me?Ā
Interviews should go both ways. Have about 5 good questions ready to ask so you can gather the information you need to make a well-informed decision. These questions should be informational in nature and allow you to understand the position and company better while reinforcing your interest and enthusiasm. This is not a good time to talk about benefits, pay, etc. That info will come in time.
**The STAR Technique is a way to frame answers to behavioral questions in an organized manner that will give the interviewer the most information about your past experience. (This is the part where the paper says to have at least 10 of these ready but I think thatās insane. Have a couple and be prepared to tweak them based on the question. Donāt use the same few for the same interview. iād say having about 3-5 ready is good enough.) As you prepare to answer each question, organize your response for clarity by answering each of the following components of the STAR technique:
What was the Situation in which you were involved?
What was the Task you needed to accomplish?
What Actions did you take?
What Results did you achieve?
IMPORTANT TIPS: Give a good amount of detail to paint a very clear picture at each step, focus on YOU versus the group, and if the Result wasnāt very positive or does not place you in a great light, that it is not interview material!
Free Online Language Courses
Here is a masterpost of MOOCs (massive open online courses) that are available, archived, or starting soon. I think they will help those that like to learn with a teacher or with videos. Ā You can always check the audit course or no certificate option so that you can learn for free.
American Sign Language
ASL University
Sign Language Structure, Learning, and Change
Arabic
Arabic for Global Exchange (in the drop-down menu)
Intro to Arabic
Madinah Arabic
Moroccan Arabic
Arabe (taught in French)
Catalan
Intro to Catalan Language & Society
Intro to Catalan Sign Language
Chinese
Beginner
Basic Chinese I.Ā II,Ā III,Ā IVĀ ,Ā V
Basic Mandarin Chinese I &Ā II
Beginnerās Chinese
Chinese for Beginners
Chinese Characters
Chinese for HSK 1
Chinese for HSK 2
Chinese for HSK 3 I & II
HSK Level 1
Mandarin Chinese
Mandarin Chinese for Business
More Chinese for Beginners
Start Talking Mandarin Chinese
UT Gateway to Chinese
Chino BƔsico (Taught in Spanish)
Intermediate
Chinese Stories
Intermediate Business Chinese
Intermediate Chinese Grammar
Dutch
Introduction to Dutch
English
Online Courses here
Resources Here
Faroese
Faroese Course
Finnish
A Taste of Finnish
Basic Finnish
Finnish for Immigrants
Finnish for Medical Professionals
French
Beginner
AP French Language and Culture
Basic French Skills
Beginnerās French: Food & Drink
Diploma in French
Elementary French IĀ &Ā II
FranƧais Interactif
French in Action
French Language Studies I,Ā II,Ā III
French: Ouverture
Intermediate & Advanced
French: Le Quatorze Juillet
Passe PartoutĀ
La CitƩ des Sciences et de Industrie
Vivre en France - A2
Vivre en France - B1
Frisian
Introduction to Frisian (Taught in English)
Introduction to Frisian (Taught in Dutch)
German
Beginner
Beginnerās German: Food & Drink
Conversational German I,Ā II,Ā III,Ā IV
Deutsch im Blick
Diploma in German
German at Work
Rundblick-Beginnerās German
Intermediate
German: Regionen Traditionen und Geschichte
Landschaftliche Vielfalt
Gwichāin
Introduction to Gwichāin Language
Hebrew
Biblical Hebrew
Know the Hebrew Alphabet
Teach Me Hebrew
Hindi
A Door into Hindi
Business Hindi
Virtual Hindi
Icelandic
Icelandic 1-5
Indonesian
Learn Indonesian
Irish
Introduction to Irish
Irish 101
Irish 102
Italian
Beginner
Beginnerās Italian: Food & Drink
Beginnerās Italian I
Introduction to Italian
Italian for Beginners 1Ā ,Ā 2,Ā 3Ā ,Ā 4Ā ,Ā 5,Ā 6Ā
Intermediate & Advanced
AP Italian Language and Culture
Intermediate Italian I
Advanced Italian I
Letteratura italiana
Japanese
Genki
Japanese JOSHU
Japanese Pronunciation
Sing and Learn Japanese
Tufs JpLang
Kazakh
A1-B2 Kazakh (Taught in Russian)
Korean
Beginner
First Step Korean
How to Study Korean
Introduction to Korean
Learn to Speak Korean
Pathway to Spoken Korean
Intermediate
Intermediate Korean
Nepali
Beginnerās Conversation and Grammar
Norwegian
Introduction to Norwegian
Norwegian on the Web
Portuguese
Curso de PortuguĆŖs para EstrangeirosĀ
Pluralidades em PortuguĆŖs Brasileiro
Russian
Beginner
Easy Accelerated Learning for Russian
Advanced
Reading Master and Margarita
Russian as an Instrument of Communication
Siberia: Russian for Foreigners
Spanish
Beginner
AP Spanish Language & Culture
Basic Spanish for English Speakers
Beginnerās Spanish: Food & Drink
Introduction to Spanish
Restaurants and Dining Out
Spanish for Beginners 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
Spanish Vocabulary
Intermediate
Spanish: Ciudades con Historia
Spanish: Espacios PĆŗblicos
Advanced
Corrección, Estilo y VariacionesĀ
Leer a Macondo
Spanish:Con Mis Propias Manos
Spanish: Perspectivas PorteƱas
Swedish
Intro to Swedish
Swedish Made Easy 1,Ā 2, & 3
Ukrainian
Read Ukrainian
Ukrainian Language for Beginners
Welsh
Beginnerās Welsh
Discovering Wales
Multiple Languages
Ancient Languages
More Language Learning ResourcesĀ & Websites!
Last updated: April 1, 2018
random drawing, spent 2 hours on it. Made with paint
I had been meaning to draw something like this for a while, i was finally able to ignore uni
2020 monthly spreads

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Hey did you know I keep a google drive folder with linguistics and language booksĀ Ā that I try to update regularlyĀ
**UPDATE**
I have restructured the folders to make them easier to use and managed to add almost all languages requested and then some
Please let me know any further suggestions
tips to get your life back on track after a breakdownā¢
sleep. your body needs to rest. the average panic attack takes as much energy as running a half-marathon. let yourself rest. take a 20 minute nap. any longer and youāll hit your REM cycle, and youāll wake up worse off. after, youāll feel so much better.
clean something. literally anything. a plate, a drawer, the whole mf bathroom. it doesnāt matter how much or how little. itāll make you feel more in control, and itāll make your surroundings more appropriate for recovery.
get some fresh air. even just opening your window for a few hours will help. if you feel up to it, take a walk. take your dog. pick some flowers. cloudgaze. even just sit in your garden for a bit. your body will thrive off of non-stale air.Ā
eat and drink. I know for some people, myself included, this is Hard. itās alright if all you can manage is a granola bar, or some cereal. anything is progress and will fuel your body. drink water if you can, but anything apart from alcohol will hydrate you.
take a shower. I have clinical depression. have done since I was 12. I know how hard it is to take a shower. but it fucking helps. if you donāt do anything else off this list, do this. itāll help more than you know.
talk to someone. I canāt stress this enough. humans are social creatures! we crave interaction. even the most introverted introvert needs to talk to someone. call your mom. text a buddy. skype your brother. chat to your local cashier. anything !! youāll feel less alone, and hopefully get some good serotontitty flowing.
do something fun! same as above, itāll make u feel so much bette, and provide a distraction. some good options are writing, drawing, watching a movie, dancing - anything you enjoy!
be kind to yourself. itās okay if you relapsed, or if you had a bad day, or anything else. treat yourself gently. you wouldnāt so harsh to a friend in your situation. itās gonna be okay.
if you canāt do all of these, itās okay. there are better days ahead. this, too, will pass.
[02/14/21]
1.47
happy valentineās day my loves!
currently listening to:
lover - taylor swift
When studying gets a little bit too much, sometimes all we need to do is step back, take a deep breath, and have faith that everything will go well.
Post exam // couldnāt pick one

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Michele is on Instagram
FEB 13 / 21
Happy Galentineās Day š (Parks and Rec is my absolute favourite show, I rewatch it like every two months lol!)Ā
Every time I draw blueberries they always end up different š
How to know which language level youāre at and tips for improving your skills - divided by proficiency level!
These are all my personal thoughts and experiences from reaching a proficient level in one language, and an intermediate in another!! Feel free to correct me or add whatever you wish<3
Ā 1. A0 - Knowledge Level: Nothing
At this stage, you have absolutely no knowledge or very little knowledge about a language. My advice is to start out slow: the alphabet, pronunciation rules, basic pronouns, colors, etc. At this point, thereās not much you can improve on (Reading/Writing, Listening and Speaking) since youāve got no actual knowledge to expand upon. Try apps like Duolingo, have fun with translating words such as your favorite animal, plant, or swear word. Donāt put too much pressure on yourself at this point, itās all in good fun! Try starting a notebook in which you write down new words, (i.e. all of them) or watching a couple videos on Youtube, even if you donāt understand much.
2. A1 - Knowledge Level: Just a Bit
This is when you slowly exit the stage ofĀ āis this even a languageā and enter theĀ ābeginnerā world. You know a couple basic verbs (to be, to have, eat, sleep, walk, talk, etc) and some sets of basic nouns/pronouns. (weekdays, months, numbers, colors, objects you find around the house, and all that fun jazz.) You can string together a couple sentences youāve heard twenty times on Duolingo! Regardless of the fact thatĀ āThe boys drink milkā is not really something youāll need in irl conversation, itās good that youāre getting familiar. By this time, you should start looking into proper grammar rules such as verb terminations, tenses, noun declinations, pronouns, etc. Childrenās books are a good way to learn a lot of stuff youād need. The language is simple and it goes straight to the point, which is the only type of writing you understand, mostly. Right now, speaking is not really an option aside from learning to pronounce words right. Listening, on the other hand, can be done really easily! If you find that Youtube channels in your target language are boring or too hard to understand, music is the way to go. Youāre especially lucky if youāre a Disney fan, because most of their songs are easy to remember and are dubbed in a lot of languages, so have fun with finding what fits you best!
3. A2 - Knowledge Level: Basic/Preliminary
Now weāre beginning to see some major improvements. You pick up words easier, you can read almost perfectly even if you donāt understand everything, and you can form really basic sentences by yourself. For speaking, by now you should be able to say your name, the place you live in, and maybe talk about your hobbies or your favorite stuff! It depends on if youāve worked with a teacher until now or not, so donāt worry if youāre still struggling. As a stepping stone between beginner and intermediate, this level can either be the one when you slowly improve or make a really big jump in your skills. Listening to songs and youtube videos should be easier, but nobody is expecting you to actually comprehend everything. As for vocabulary and reading, learning new words should come more intuitively by now, but again, youāre still in the early days. Writing is still something that can be difficult, so try maybe linking a couple sentences together to make a short story and translating some simple texts. But it you donāt find it difficult, writing a hundred words once a couple days may be the way to go.
4. B1 - Knowledge Level - Intermediate
Finally, weāve reached the intermediate stage! By now you should be able to hold very basic conversation and reveal information about yourself. You should be able to pick up words you know from the people around you, and understand mostly everything if spoken slowly and clearly to. Reading light books or magazines should be challenging but okay, while you should be able to remember certain words without making too big of an effort. By this stage, active learning is still essential, as you probably have a lot more ahead in your language learning journey. I encourage you to write short stories or several sentences about your day in a diary, depending on what works for you. Watching Youtube videos should be something you do often, because it improves listening skills greatly and gets you accustomed to informal speech patterns and filler words.
5. B2 - Knowledge Level - Advanced Intermediate
Yay! You have officially reached the advanced intermediate stage! You should be able to hold everyday conversation without too big of a headache, listening probably isnāt a breeze for you but still, if you watch a basic youtube video you can pretty much get all of it. YA books should be a regular part of your reading, since theyāre not too hard to comprehend but still a good reading exercise. Vocabulary probably isnāt a bother anymore, since you know most of the words you need and the ones you donāt, you hear them once or five times and they stick to you. At this level you can probably write some basic fanfiction, or anything that doesnāt require advanced language skills but is still challenging. Congrats! Youāre almost at an advanced level!
6. C1 - Advanced
If youāre still here, means youāve got a strong sense of dedication. C1 is the advanced level, where you have pretty much everything that you need to comfortably live your life in a country which speaks your target language. If youāre already here and most of the above things seem far, far away to you, then maybe itās time to get down on some serious reading. Look up local classics, or contemporary works that stimulate your mind. Writing essays, reviews, reports, etc, should be something you are able to do, as you have a good grasp on both formal and informal language, both literary concepts and idioms/phrasal verbs/slang. Listening should come easily, with the ability to understand everything that is spoken to you without worries, as long as they donāt have an alien accent. Speaking, too, should be a breeze by now, with everyday conversation being a piece of cake and more formal conversations not posing too big of a challenge. If you want to reach the nextā and lastā level, it can be done through thorough preparation of skills that are usually required by exams or for language-related jobs. If you donāt care about either of these, congrats! You learned a language!Ā
7. C2 - Proficient
Long past fluency, you now wish to master a language, down to its very core and history. Pick up some of the big classics to read. Watch a bunch of those complicated videos explaining complicated concepts. Write poetry and prose,and speak to people in contexts which require more than the average range of vocabulary. If youāre still not satisfied, get a damn teacher. Tumblr canāt help you now.
Thereās happiness and then thereās realizing that the last ten pages of a scientific paper are just the bibliography.

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hi friends! iāve been falling behind with my studies, so iām doing this challenge to add a bit more accountability. my first goal is to catch up! āļø šŖ
5/100 days of productivity (01.27.2021)
worked hard on summarizing some lectures (also used a lot of colors because this subject is info-loaded)
took a walk under the sunset āļø and some light rainĀ āļø
6/100 days of productivity (01.28.2021)
got busy with errands + chores + zumba w/ fam + korean studies
unintentional break from acads today; life is good š»
21:59 ; 7 feb 21
my second semester starts tomorrow. not entirely sure if iām ready to go at it again non-stop for 5 months, but letās make the best of it! :)