You say âamateurâ as if it was a dirty word. âAmateurâ comes from the Latin word âamareâ, which means to love. To do things for the love of it.
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Misplaced Lens Cap
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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
One Nice Bug Per Day
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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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JBB: An Artblog!
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@studyspo-blog
You say âamateurâ as if it was a dirty word. âAmateurâ comes from the Latin word âamareâ, which means to love. To do things for the love of it.
Mozart in the Jungle (via ablogwithaview)

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This is important.
nothing is safer than the sound of you reading out loud to me
-the perfect date
Hi! I have decided to make this masterpost, putting in one place everything that I have found ADHD - related!
For some links, I have listed some of the things you can find there, choosing those that I thought were the most useful, but check the whole site because everything is great!
BASICS:Â
what is ADHD.
types of ADHD.
adult ADHD.
adults vs kids ADHD.
women and ADHD.
ADHD test - please, tho, donât take this for granted and please donât self diagnose, talk with your doctor about the results!
the best ADHD related youtube channel. - adhd in girls // sleeping // relationships // how fidgeting is useful.
signs of ADHD.
debunked myths.
things nobody tells you about having ADHD.
7 Everyday Struggles Of People With ADHD.
STUDYING:
studying with ADHD. (problems+solutions)
15 study tips for students with ADHD.
more study tips.
even more tips.
another list of tips.
exam tips. // grade tips.
math accomodations.
writing help / websites.
APPS.
ADHDtricks - format study material // blue tack // trouble understanding // readable web .
FOCUSING:
keep your focus.
food to help focusing.
chronic procrastination.
hyperfocus.
fight distractions.Â
focus right now.
more focusing hacks.
MISC:
boredom.Â
sleeping. // tips for better sleep.Â
medications + avoid side effects.
medsâ side effects (and how to reduce them.)
more about meds.
ADHD strenghts!
read some life experiences!
planning. + great planning site.
relationships.
2 hour glitter jar calming video + how to make one!
some satisfying videos.
aquarium calming video.Â
WEBSITES:
CHADD.
ADDA - adhd starter kit!
ADHDtogether.
kidsinthehouseâs ADHD section.
ADHD reddit.
Totallyadd.
verywellâs ADHD section.
ADDtitudemag.
ADHD study tumblr.
Social networks! Use facebook to find support groups and pages, use Tumblr to connect with others like you and use Twitter to find out about new articles and resources with the tag #adhd!
Thats it! Hope you have found this mp useful, feel free to add things!
+ other links:
useful programs masterposts.
how to write an analytical/scientific essay.
cute ân unusual stationery.
dyscalculia resources + advice.
how i take my math notes.
my pics.
gaah thank you so much for this
Hi, Iâve been getting messages about how to get motivated/sustain motivation in school. However, I was not sure about how to answer them because Iâm a certified Lazy Ass⢠whose motto in school is âSLEEP WHEN YOU CANâ. I  tried my best to come up with a decent answer, though, and I hope this post will help someone ^_^ Soooo, here it goes:
1. Understand the concept of motivation.
Motivation is the drive to do something. It is important, because it helps a person (re-)focus their goals. Through (re-)examining the forces that drives a person to achieve, one can uncover oneâs reasons for achieving something.
There are two kinds of motivation: extrinsic motivation and intrinsic motivation. Extrinsic motivation is motivation that comes from outside forces, as in, one is motivated to get high grades to make their parents proud. On the other hand, intrinsic motivation is motivation that comes from within, as in, one is motivated to answer math problems because one feels satisfaction in solving those problems. Different instances necessitate different kinds of motivation, and one personâs motivation may not really be effective for another.
âMotivationâ is so much more complex than that, though, so here are some readings on the topic: x x x x x
Personally, I believe that motivation can only take a person so far, because what happens when you literally have no drive to do anything? My banner says âdiscipline outlives motivationâ, because Iâve learned that thereâs something better than to wait for peak motivation to hit, which is to:
2. Develop good study habits.
Turn studying into a behavior. The goal is to make studying a natural part of oneâs routine, as natural as, say, opening Tumblr or Instagram. (Because you donât need much (or any) motivation to check social media).
Hereâs a long answered ask on how to make a study plan in three easy steps and another answered ask on how to balance tasks.
3. Discover how you best study.
Every person learns differently. For example, Iâm a visual learner, and I learn best by seeing and arranging information on a page. I rewrite notes to make them pretty, and I doodle all the time. Audiobooks and lecture recordings donât really work for me (but they can work for you). Discovering how one studies would tremendously help anyone, since it can be frustrating to study without retaining information. Conversely, it is motivating when one understands what one is studying.
Learn what kind of learner you have by taking this quiz or answering these questions, then take a look at these posts to see some studying tips based on how you learn:
Learning styles
Types of learners
Four types of learners
Study methods and what suits you better
4. Surround yourself with people who support what youâre doing.
Studying is difficult enough as it is, and you donât really need to make it more difficult by having people around you telling you that you donât really need to study for that test. I was really lazy in college, and I would rather sleep than study, but I was able to get good grades, because I lived with people who persevered in their studies. Because they were studying late into the night, I also got into that habit (albeit grudgingly at first). We all inspired each other, made cups of coffees for each other, and even took naps together. Having supportive people around will make you realize that you are not alone in this struggle to study, and that youâre all going to make it out alive.
5. Â Do things apart from studying.
Youâre a person, not a studying machine. Studying is only a part of life, not your whole life itself. Find a hobby, stay true to your art, volunteer at a dog shelterâitâs your call. Just keep being passionate about something else other than studying. This âsomething elseâ can help you release stress as well as motivate you. You must also understand that millennials, more than any other generation, mix work and play, sometimes to the point where the two are indistinguishable. Playing is not a crime, millennials. Itâs only natural. (Remember itâs okay to take a break. Alexander Hamilton was asked to take a break, he refused to, and you all know what happened to him >_>)
Whew, that was a mouthful uwu I really hoped I made sense. Feel free to add to this post! :)

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The sines as numbers
sin(pi/6): 1/2
sin(pi/4): 1/sqrt(2)
sin(pi/3): sqrt(3)/2
sin(pi/2): 1
sin(pi): 0
sin(3pi/2): -1
sin(2pi): 0
Itâs okay to work hard, but itâs not okay to kill yourself working.
this is the perfect grade of good luck
reblog in 5 seconds and all of your grades will inch ever closer to perfect
âprogress not perfectionâ but why not heheheÂ
i feel bad for math. its such a calm and friendly discipline full of beautiful and complex patterns and theres absolutely nothing inherently bad or oppressive about it but ppl treat it as though its evil and malicious. a lot of pure math lacks any kind of practical application or end goal, and just exists for the sake of stimulating peoples minds and pushing the limits of the medium as far as is possible. much like almost every kind of art
math means u no harm friends
10 Mistakes When Studying
1. âI Donât Know where to Begin.â
Make a list of all the things you have to do. Break your workload down ito manageable chunks. Prioritize. Schedule your time realistically. Begin studying early, with an hour or two per day, and slowly build as the exam approaches.
2. âIâve Got So Much to StudyâŚAnd so Little Time"
Preview. Survey your syllabus, reading material, and notes. Identify the most important topics emphasized, and areas still not understood. Previewing saves time, by helping you organize and focus in on the main topics.
3. âThis Stuff is so Dry, I canât Even Stay Awake Reading Itâ
Get actively involved with the text as you read. Ask yourself, âWhat is important to remember about this section?â Take notes or underline key concepts. Discuss the material with others in your class. Stay on the offensive.
4. âI Read It. I Understand It. But I Just Canât Get it To Sink Inâ
Elaborate. We remember best the things that are most meaningful to us. As you are reading, try to elaborate upon new information with your own examples. Try to integrate what youâre studying with what you already know. You will be able to remember new material better if you can link it to something thatâs already meaningful to you.
Chunking: Example: to remember the colors in the visible spectrum, Rog G.Biv â> reduce the information the three âchunksâ.
Mnemonics: Associate new information with something familiar.
5. âI Guess I Understand Itâ
Test yourself. Make up questions about key sections in notes or reading. Examine the relationships between concepts and sections. Often, imply by changing section headings you can generate many effective questions.
6. âThereâs Too Much to Rememberâ
Organize. Information is recalled better if it is represented in an organized framework that will make retrieval more systematic.
Write chapter outlines of summaries; emphasize relationships between sections.
Group information into categories or hierarchies, where possible.
Information Mapping. Draw up a matrix to organize and interrelate material.
7. âI Knew It A Minute Agoâ
Review. After reading a section, try to recall the information contained in it. Try answering the questions you made up for that section. If you cannot recall enough, re-read portions you had trouble remembering. The more time you spend studying, the more you tend to recall. Even after the point where information can be perfectly recalled, further study makes the material less likely to be forgotten entirely. How you organize and integrate new information is still more important than how much time you spend studying.
For more follow How To Study Quick!!

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intellectus:
While language learning apps and websites such as are plentiful online, places to practice are less easy to find! Hereâs a few you can try out, none of which are limited to just one or two languages:
Chat
HelloTalk (iOS/Android): an app with 100+ languages that lets you chat with native speakers of your target language from around the world with voice + text. Itâs the one most geared towards just conversation!
WeSpeke (iOS/Android): an app and website with probably the largest variety of languages at 130, with text, audio, and video chat.
Conversation Exchange: this oneâs a little different, as it not only allows you to get a pen pal and has text, video, and voice, but it also lets you meet up with native speakers in your area to practice!
Speaky (iOS/Android): a web and mobile app which is pretty much social media for language learners! It has 110+ languages and you can make video/audio calls and message from your browser.
HiNative (iOS/Android): not exactly for chatting with people, but instead you can ask native speakers about their culture/language in your target language!
Read
Duolingo Immersion: lets you translate articles from your target language into your native language, or vice versa.
Readlang: read articles, books, and other texts online, with vocab support, and it will create vocab lists and flashcards based on the words you needed help with.
All You Can Read: a selection of magazines and news websites from 200 countries, offered in a wide variety of languages.
Worldpress: a directory of worldwide newspapers and magazines, sorted by country, region, and also political affiliation.
Listen
Live-Radio: a collection of thousands of worldwide radio stations in a multitude of languages.
Every Tongue: 7,000+ recordings of all different languages, readily available online.
Omniglot: a massive listing of online radio stations in languages from A-Z!
Global Recordings Network: search by language or country to listen to any of a wide variety of online recordings.
Academic Writing Resources
General:
The Five-Paragraph Essay
Using Punctuation Marks
Deadly Sins Checklist
Formatting Your Paper
Writing About Literature
Basic Essay
Revision Checklist
Planning and Organization
Editing and Proofreading
Latin Terms
Essay Structure
Tips on Introducing Quotes
Academic Writing Tips
Introductions:
Introductory Paragraphs
Introductions
Writing an Introduction
Preparing to Write an Introduction
Introduction Strategies
The Introductory Paragraph
Writing Effective Introductions
In The Beginning
Introductions and Conclusions
The Introductory Paragraph
Writing Introductory Paragraphs
How to Write an Intro
Body Paragraphs:
Paragraph Development and Topic Sentences
Transitions
Transitions
Transitions
Four Components of an Effective Body Paragraph
Writing Paragraphs
Paragraph Development
Body Paragraphs
Body Paragraphs
Strong Body Paragraphs
Body Paragraphs
Writing Body Paragraphs
How to Write Body Paragraphs
Writing the Body
Writing Body Paragraphs
Body Paragraphs
Body Paragraphs that Defend a Thesis
How to Write Body Paragraphs
The Perfect Paragraph
Topic Sentences:
Topic Sentences
Writing Topic Sentences
Topic Sentences
Topic Sentences
The Topic Sentence
Paragraphs and Topic Sentences
The Topic Sentence
Topics, Main Ideas, and Topic Sentences
Writing a Good Topic Sentence
Good Topic Sentences
Conclusions:
Writing Effective Conclusions
Introductions and Conclusions
Conclusion Paragraphs
Conclusion Strategies
Conclusions
Tips for a Strong Conclusion
The Concluding Paragraph
Ending the Essay
Types of Conclusions
Writing a Strong Conclusion
How to Write a Conclusion
Writing Conclusions
Guide to Conclusions
Thesis Statements:
The Thesis Statement
Thesis Statements
Writing a Thesis Statement
Thesis Statement
Tips and Examples
Writing a Thesis
Writing the Thesis
How to Write Your Thesis
The Thesis
Thesis Statements
Guidelines for Writing a Thesis
Thesis Statements
Thesis
Thesis Statements
The Thesis
Create a Strong Thesis
How to Write a Thesis
Developing a Thesis
Guide to Writing Thesis Statements
Thesis Statements
Citing:
When to Cite
APA Documentation
MLA Documentation
Suggestions for Citing Sources
Research and Citation Resources
Citation Information
MLA Guidelines for Citing Poetry
MLA Style for Poetry
How to Format Your Paper
Argumentative Essays:
Argumentative Essays
Argument
Argumentative Essays
Persuasive or Argumentative Essays
Argumentative Essay
Argument/Argumentative
Argumentative Essays
How to Write a Good Argument
How to Write an Argumentative Essay
Writing Conclusions to Argumentative Essays
Argumentative Essay
Persuasive Essay Writing
Writing Concluding Paragraphs
Constructing the Argumentative Essay
Writing About Poetry:
Writing About Poetry
Writing About Poetry
Writing About Poetry Q & A
Poetry Explications
Writing About Poetry
Writing About Poems
Explicating a Poem
Writing About Poetry
Writing a Thesis Paper About a Poem
How to Start a Poetry Introduction
Poetry Essay Structure
Poetry Explication
Expository Essays:
Structure of a General Expository Essay
Expository Essay Examples
Sample Expository Essay
Expository Writing
Expository Essay Model
Elements of Expository Essays
Expository Writing Information
Expository Essays
Writing Expository Essays
How to Write an Expository Essay
Tips on Writing an Expository Essay
Expository Essays
Essay Map
Writing Expository Essays
How to Create a Strong Expository Essay
Expository Essay Writing
The Expository Essay
Research Papers:
How to Write a Research Paper in Literature
Writing a Research Paper
The Research Paper
How to Write a Research Paper
Five Paragraph Research Paper
Sample Research Paper
Writing a Research Paper
Tips for a Research Paper
How to Write a Research Paper
Writing a Scientific Research Paper
Writing Research Papers
Research and Writing
Research Papers that Rock
How to Write an Effective Research Paper
College Application Essays:
Application Essay Tips
Application Essays
Tips
10 Tips
Application Essays
How to Write a College Application Essay
Tips for an Effective Essay
Doâs and Donâtâs
College Application Essay
How to Write a College Application Essay
Narrative Essays:
Narrative and Descriptive
Narrative Essay Writing
The Personal Essay
Narrative Essays
Narrative Essays
Writing Narrative Essays
Narrative/Descriptive
Narrative Essay
Writing a Narrative Essay
Tips on Writing a Narrative Essay
⢠Good morning âď¸ My mid-terms are starting on Monday đ there never seems to be enough time to cover everything⌠So lets use time wisely and keep my revision on track. đ¸â˘
Here is another pretty notes appreciation post! I love pretty notes and I find it easier to remember stuff that way. If you send me pics of your pretty notes and I find them especially aesthetic Iâll post them and give you a shout out!
(You must be following me to do so)
Free Printable
as per request, hereâs a printable of my last post. if you have trouble downloading it directly from tumblr, you can also download it here! thanks for the love! if you print it out link me a picture, iâd love to see x

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link to my study tips series (strive-for-da-best)
Hey Everyone! When I was younger, I used to read a ton. As a direct result of that, my writing and reading were on point. Recently, however, I havenât been reading as much, and as a result, my writing isnât as good as I want it to be (albeit, still pretty good). Iâve decided to read all the books on this list over the next 1 and a half years to get back into reading and to improve my writing. Enjoy! :)
1. To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee
2. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
3. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
4. Animal Farm by George Orwell
5. Jane Eyre by Charlotte BrontĂŤ
6. The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger
7. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
8. Macbeth by William Shakespeare
9. Lord of the Flies by William Golding
10. Hamlet by William Shakespeare
11. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
12. The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne
13. Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare
14. A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
15. The Ecological Rift by John Bellamy Foster, Brett Clark, Richard York
16. This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs The Climate by Naomi Klein
17. Catch-22 by Joseph Heller
18. The Crucible by Arthur Miller
19. The Odyssey by Homer
20. The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane
21. Wuthering Heights by Emily BrontĂŤ
22. Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut
23. Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe
24. The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey ChaucerÂ
25. The Stranger by Albert Camus
26. Frankenstein by Mary Shelly
27. The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
28. Beowulf by Unknown
29. The Systems View of Life: A Unifying Vision by Fritjof Capra, Luigi Luisi
30. All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque
31. A Midsummer Nightâs Dream by William Shakespeare
32. Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad
33. Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson
34. The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee WilliamsÂ
35. Faust: First Part by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
36. Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
37. The Awakening by Kate Chopin
38. Candide by Voltaire
39. The Color Purple by Alice Walker
40. The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka
41. Oedipus Rex by Sophocles
42. Uncle Tomâs Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe
43. Steppenwolf by Hermann Hesse
44. One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
45. The Bell Jar by Slyvia Plath
46. The Call of the Wild by Jack London
47. Walden by Henry David Thoreau
48. Antigone by Sophocles
49. Things Fall Apart (The African Trilogy, #1) by Chinua Achebe
50. Gulliverâs Travels by Jonathan Swift
51. The Last of the Mohicans (The Leatherstocking Tales #2) by James Fenimore Cooper
52. Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
53. Beloved by Toni Morrison
54. Vanity Fair by William Makepeace Thackeray
55. Selected Tales by Edgar Allen Poe
56. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
57. 1984 by George Orwell
58. Don Quixote by Miguel de CervantesÂ
59. The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner
60. One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel GarcĂa MĂĄrquez
61. The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde
62. A Good Man is Hard to Find and Other Stories by Flannery OâConnor
63. Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw
64. As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner
65. Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison
66. The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas
67. A Dollâs House by Henrik Ibsen
68. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass by Frederick Douglass
69. Tess of the DâUrbervilles by Thomas Hardy
70. A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway
71. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce
72. Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett
73. Moby-Dick; or, The Whale by Herman Melville
74. The Iliad by Homer
75. Inferno (The Divine Comedy #1) by Dante Alighieri
76. Babbitt by Sinclair Lewis
77. An American Tragedy by Theodore DreiserÂ
78. The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling by Henry Fielding
79. Long Dayâs Journey into Night by Eugene OâNeill
80. War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy
81. Cyrano de Bergac by Edmond Rostand
82. The Hunchback of Notre-Dame by Victor Hugo
83. The Mill on the Floss by George Elliot
84. The Cherry Orchard by Anton Chekhov
85. Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston
86. Bartleby the Scrivener by Herman Melville
87. Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak
88. The House of Mirth by Edith Wharton
89. Selected Essays by Ralph Waldo Emerson
90. Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman
91. The Good Soldier by Ford Madox Ford
92. Call it Sleep by Henry Roth
93. Fathers and Sons by Ivan Turgenev
94. The Portrait of a Lady by Henry James
95. The Adventures of Augie March by Saul Bellow
96. A Death in the Family by James Agee
97. The Turn of the Screw by Henry James
98. The Magic Mountain by Thomas Mann
99. Go Tell It on the Mountain by James Baldwin
100. Death Comes for the Archbishop by Willa Carther
101. To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf