āØššÆšāļøššÆšāØ ig: ultbluee

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Love Begins

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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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@studile
āØššÆšāļøššÆšāØ ig: ultbluee

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day 9 / 30 day studyblr challenge
a photo of your desk in use šµļø
my drama group and I had a nice study session working on the script for our exam project
day 8 / 30 day studyblr challenge
a photo of your to-do list š¼
day 7 / 30 day studyblr challenge
the best advice anyone's ever given you š
on all occasions in my childhood, where i can remember that i wanted to give up on something, my dad would sit me down and ask me, why? no matter what it was, tell me why you want to quit would be the gist of his response. though it isn't a straight forward piece of advice, learning to ask myself that same question is the most useful thing i've got when it comes to seeing the important things through and managing my time.
(my giraffe and i pictured above is unrelated to this but still very cute)
day 6 / 30 day studyblr challenge
a photo showing how you relax š¼
my relaxing almost always features either my camera, a book and black coffee, an attempt at my piano or some good music - i prefer cd's over spotify when i'm at home because it allows me to put my phone away :)

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Ahh! I canāt believe itās only 2 weeks into the new semester, Iām counting down to reading break already :OĀ
day 5 / 30 day studyblr challenge
a photo of your favourite book šø
for now it's narrowed down to two, and that is only because i put richard siken's crush as my day 3 photo ~
han kang's the vegetarian is one of the most haunting and beautiful books i've ever read; george orwell's nineteen-eightyfour is both an amazing story, and a terrifying vision of a future envisioned in 1949, that might not be too far from the world we risk creating anno 2019
day 4 // 30 day studyblr challenge
a photo of your most recent workš¹
i live by these kinds of to do list grids, and all i wouldn't have known about them if the studyblr community hadn't brought them to my attention, so thank you to all of you for that! <3
day 3 // 30 day studyblr challenge
your favourite motivational quote š¼
i will have to be completely honest and say that i couldn't think of a single (1) motivational quote to save my life, so for this day in the challenge, i'll put down the end of the poem The Torn-Up Road, one of my favourites:
"And words, little words,
words too small for any hope or promise, not really soothing
but soothing nonetheless."
day 2 // 30 day studyblr challenge
a photo of your study space šø
i recently moved out and into a small apartment in copenhagen. since i can't properly fit a desk into the room, i mostly study in my big, cozy chair!

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day 1 // 30 day studyblr challenge
a photo of your supplies š¼
30 Day Studyblr Challenge
Hello everyone! So in my time here I havenāt really come across a studyblr challenge other than the great ā100 days of productivityā meme which I know is really helping a lot of people! I know there are probably some out there but I decided to contribute too!
However, I know some people struggle with what to post and when, and 100 days is a huge commitment! So I designed this short(er) ā30 Day Studyblr Challengeā that anybody can participate in if they want to! The 30 days donāt have to be consecutive because I understand that people are busy and canāt always find time in the day to come on tumblr! So I invite you to take part in this little activity, and please feel free to tag me in your challenge uploads - If I see that Iāve been tagged Iāll check the post out.
Here are your challenge questions: Day 1: A photo of your supplies Day 2: A photo of your study space Day 3: Your favourite motivational quote Day 4: A photo of your most recent work Day 5: A photo of your favourite book Day 6: A photo showing how you relax Day 7: The best advice anyoneās ever given you Day 8: A photo of your to-do list Day 9: A photo of your desk in use Day 10: Who is your favourite teacher/professor and why? Day 11: A photoset detailing your routine for the day Day 12: A photo of your favourite study snack Day 13: A photo of your textbooks Day 14: Send your favourite studyblr(s) an uplifting message! Day 15: A photo of your handwriting Day 16: What music do you like to listen to whilst studying? If you donāt listen to music while you work, what do you do? Day 17: Find a new/different study spot to your usual one and snap a photo! Day 18: A photo of your favourite pen(s) to use Day 19: A photo of your study space featuring a glass of water. (Itās super important to stay hydrated while you study!) Day 20: Talk about your favourite fictional character Day 21: A photo of your diary/planner/journal Day 22: A photo of your dream school/university Day 23: A photo of your favourite character from TV (Because itās important to relax sometimes too) Day 24: Write the sentence āI can do anything as long as I put my mind to it.ā in all of the languages that you speak and take a photo. Tell yourself that every day! Day 25: A photo of the work/notes youāre most proud of Day 26: Try out mind-mapping and photograph the end result Day 27: Try out a printable and take a photo of it in use Day 28: Try going for a walk before you start studying today. Take a photo of something interesting you see while youāre out. Day 29: Describe your study technique. Is it different for different subjects? Day 30: You made it! Reward yourself by doing one of your favourite things to do and snap a photo!
Please donāt forget to tag me in your posts, and/or tag them with #studyblrchallengehayley so that I can make sure I see them!
Have fun :* xo
Hayley
Hey guys, so Iām nearing the end of my senior year, and itās been great so far! I accomplished my academic tasks efficiently and didnāt burn myself out, and I think the main contributor to my success as a student is my organization system. This system has been refined throughout my high school years, but I think now Iāve finally found the most effective methods.
Please remember that this isnāt the only organization system you can adopt; this is just the one that works the best for me, and I hope that by sharing it with you, youāll gain a new perspective on how to stay organized as a high school student.
The first thing I wanna talk about is my notebook system, which I briefly mentioned in my Guide to Note-Taking.
My notebook system comprises three types of notebooks: the Everything Notebook, the subject notebook, and the revision notebook.
The Everything Notebook
The first stage is in-class notes. I only bring one notebook to school every day. I call it my Everything Notebook, and this is where I write down all of the notes I take in class. This way, I donāt have to lug around six notebooks where Iām only going to use a few pages in each of them that day.
Subject Notebooks
At the end of the day, I would revise my notes and compare them to the syllabus so I know where we are in the learning process. I would then transfer my class notes from my Everything Notebook to my different subject notebooks. This is stage two. I also start to jazz up my notes because I use the notes in my subject notebooks to study for tests.
In addition to my class notes, I include material from my teachersā notes that they might not have elaborated on, as well as points in the syllabus (Iām currently taking A2) that were only glazed over briefly, or not at all, in some cases. (Note: this does not mean they completely skip a chapter or topic; itās more like they missed a few bullet points that should be in my notes but arenāt. An example would be if weāre learning about phenol reactions and the teacher forgot to mention the use of FeCl3 as a test for phenol.)
Revision Notebooks
Stage three comes a little later, when exam week is just around the corner. Essentially, I rewrite and improve my notes from my five different subject notebooks into a single revision notebook or binder. (Recently, Iāve opted for a revision notebook because theyāre lighter and easier to carry around.)
Because my teachers donāt always teach in the order of the syllabus, the first thing I do is organize my notes according to the syllabus. I would then fill in any other missing gaps in the material that hadnāt been filled in stage two.
When compiling material for my revision notebook, I use as many sources as possible: my own notes, my teachersā notes, youtube videos, online sites, and my favorite, the mark scheme! I add in some answers from past papers (explanations only, so no calculations) mainly to secure marks. Itās safer to memorize definitions straight from the mark scheme than from the textbook or from handouts. I also do this to ease my memorization, especially for topics that require lengthy explanations. Itās a lot easier to remember the 6 points I need to explain the principles of NMRI than to remember everything in the four-page handout my teacher gave me.
Folders and binders are essential to organizing your papers. Some people keep a single accordion folder for all their papers, but for me itās just too heavy to carry around all the time. The same goes for subject folders that are brought to school every day.
Instead, my binder/folder system comprises my Everything Folder and my subject binders.
The Everything Folder
The folder I carry with me to school every day is this A4 folder I got from Tokyu Hands. It has 5 pockets, one for each day of the week, so all the papers I receive on Monday will go behind the first divider, and so on.
Some people also keep blank papers in their folders; I donāt because my school has its own lined paper and graphing pads that I keep under my desk that I use if a teacher asks us to do an assignment on those papers. If I do work at home, I prefer to just use a plain A4 paper or a legal pad.
Subject Binders
At the end of the week, Iāll sort my papers into my subject binders. Sometimes Iāll keep some papers in the folder if I think Iāll be needing it the next week. This usually only applies to worksheets because all my teachersā notes are available on Google Classroom, so I can access them even if I donāt physically have them.
Each of these binders have sections inside them:
Physics: 1 for handouts, notes, and tests, 1 for Paper 4 (Theory), 1 for Paper 5 (Practical Planning). I included extra tabs to mark the different topics in the handouts section.
Chemistry: same as Physics.
Economics: 1 for Paper 3 (MCQ), 1 for Paper 4 (Case Study and Essay). A lot of my Economics material is online, though.
English: 1 for Paper 3 (Text and Discourse analysis), and 2 for Paper 4 (Language Topics, which includes 1 for Child Language Acquisition, 1 for World Englishes). Past papers, handouts, and notes all go under their respective topics.
Mathematics: I just keep everything together because I never revise math and just constantly do past papers.
This makes it easier for me to revise each subject because I can just take one binder with me instead of a messy folder with everything just shoved in there.
I keep a magazine file for each of my A-Level subjects (English and Mathematics are combined). All my textbooks, revision guides, and subject notebooks are kept here, so if I need to revise one subject, thatās the magazine file Iāll take out.
These magazine files prevent any small things (like my book of flashcards) from being shoved to the back of my bookshelf, or materials from different subjects from getting mixed up.
In my senior year, I mostly plan using this app called Edo Agenda. It syncs across all my devices for free and has all the features I need: a to do list to organize tasks, monthly and weekly calendars to organize events, a journal to organize notes and memos.
I used to bullet journal regularly, but it takes too much time during weekdays, so now I just bullet journal for the therapeutic effects it gives me, and I use an app for organizing tasks and events. Sometimes at the end of each week, Iāll transfer my tasks to my bullet journal and then decorate the page, but again, this is just for its therapy.
Organizing your school supplies is just as important as organizing your papers and notes. With a more organized backpack and pencil case, you wonāt waste time looking for your things at the bottom of an abyss.
Pencil Case
I donāt find it necessary to bring so much stationery to schoolĀ unless I plan on making notes at school (usually during revision week).
Backpack
Because weāre already in the revision term, I donāt really carry a lot of things in my everyday backpack, just the following:
Pencil case
Everything Notebook
Everything Folder
Revision notebook
Kindle
Phone
Wallet
Earphones
Calculator
Speaker
Drinking bottle
A pouch with things like a hairbrush, pads, and lip balm
And thatās all for now! I hope this post will help you organize your school life (if you havenāt already) or at least provide some useful insights on some ways to stay organized as a high school student.
How to Study Like a Harvard Student
Taken fromĀ Sophia Chua-Rubenfeld, daughter of the Tiger Mother
Preliminary Steps 1. Choose classes that interest you. That way studying doesnāt feel like slave labor. If you donāt want to learn, then I canāt help you. 2. Make some friends. See steps 12, 13, 23, 24. General Principles 3. Study less, but study better. 4. Avoid Autopilot Brain at all costs. 5. Vague is bad. Vague is a waste of your time. 6. Write it down. 7. Suck it up, buckle down, get it done. Plan of Attack Phase I: Class 8. Show up. Everything will make a lot more sense that way, and you will save yourself a lot of time in the long run. 9. Take notes by hand. I donāt know the science behind it, but doing anything by hand is a way of carving it into your memory. Also, if you get bored you will doodle, which is still a thousand times better than ending up on stumbleupon or something. Phase II: Study Time 10. Get out of the library.Ā The sheer fact of being in a library doesnāt fill you with knowledge. Eight hours of Facebooking in the library is still eight hours of Facebooking. Also, people who bring food and blankets to the library and just stay there during finals week start to smell weird. Go home and bathe. You can quiz yourself while you wash your hair. 11. Do a little every day, but donāt let it be your whole day.Ā āThis afternoon, I will read a chapter of something and do half a problem set. Then, I will watch an episode of South Park and go to the gymā ALWAYS BEATS āStarting right now, I am going to read as much as I possibly canā¦oh wow, now itās midnight, Iām on page five, and my room reeks of ramen and dysfunction.ā 12. Give yourself incentive.Ā Thereās nothing worse than a gaping abyss of study time. If you know youāre going out in six hours, youāre more likely to get something done. 13. Allow friends to confiscate your phone when they catch you playing Angry Birds. Oh and if you think you need a break, you probably donāt. Phase III: Assignments 14. Stop highlighting. Underlining is supposed to keep you focused, but itās actually a one-way ticket to Autopilot Brain. You zone out, look down, and suddenly you have five pages of neon green that you donāt remember reading. Write notes in the margins instead. 15. Do all your own work. You get nothing out of copying a problem set. Itās also shady. 16. Read as much as you can. No way around it. Stop trying to cheat with Sparknotes. 17. Be a smart reader, not a robot (lol).Ā Ask yourself: What is the author trying to prove? What is the logical progression of the argument?Ā You can usually answer these questions by reading the introduction and conclusion of every chapter. Then, pick any two examples/anecdotes and commit them to memory (write them down). They will help you reconstruct the authorās argument later on. 18. Donāt read everything, but understand everything that you read.Ā Better to have a deep understanding of a limited amount of material, than to have a vague understanding of an entire course. Once again: Vague is bad. Vague is a waste of your time. 19. Bullet points. For essays, summarizing, everything. Phase IV: Reading Period (Review Week) 20. Once again: do not move into the library.Ā Eat, sleep, and bathe. 21. If you donāt understand it, it will definitely be on the exam. Solution: textbooks; the internet. 22. Do all the practice problems. This one is totally tiger mom. 23. People are often contemptuous of rote learning. Newsflash: even at great intellectual bastions like Harvard, you will be required to memorize formulas, names and dates.Ā To memorize effectively:Ā stop reading your list over and over again. It doesnāt work. Say it out loud, write it down. Remember how you made friends? Have them quiz you, then return the favor. 24. Again with the friends: ask them to listen while you explain a difficult concept to them. This forces you to articulate your understanding. Remember, vague is bad. 25. Go for the big picture.Ā Try to figure out where a specific concept fits into the course as a whole. This will help you tap into Big Themes ā every class has Big Themes ā which will streamline what you need to know. You can learn a million facts, but until you understand how they fit together, youāre missing the point. Phase V: Exam Day 26. Crush exam. Get A.
oct. 5 || revising french with a rainy morning today ā

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ā @ohghiblies
11.09.18Ā dien/mittag Ā šµ
a nice day with the most battered book I own, with a nice view of my proletarian copenhagen suburb ~