cherry valley forever
todays bird
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
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RMH
DEAR READER
Peter Solarz
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

No title available

Andulka
Claire Keane

★
Not today Justin
d e v o n

JVL
Today's Document
tumblr dot com

No title available
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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@mintaur-blog
08.29.15 || Annotations are probably some of my favorite things ever
Tips: - Define all words you don’t recognize or are unsure of. I’ve thought I understood a poem, defined one word that I was like “eh I know this word, but I better double check” and then my whole perception of the poem changed completely. - Notice words or themes that repeat. The author has come back to those ideas for a reason. - Use a variety of symbols. I like to highlight, underline, wavy underline, circle, and box specific words or lines. If you use different markings for different ideas, it’s a lot easier to follow your own train of thought if you come back to the poem in a few weeks or even a few days. - As you go along, jot down ideas. They’ll probably change once you’ve read the poem a couple times, but your first thought may be your best thought!
More Free Printables Than You Should Ever Need
Monthly
2015 Colorful Monthly Calendars
Snapfish 2015 Monthly Grid Calendars
Snapfish Large Monthly Planner (meant for families but will work great for splitting up assignments by class)
Day Designer Monthly Goals Tracker
Simplified Planner Monthly
Weekly
Two Week Schedule (M/D/N)
Get Buttoned Up Weekly Productivity Tracker
Get Buttoned Up Comprehensive Weekly To Do List
Snapfish Weekly Planner (1)
Snapfish Weekly Planner (2)
Snapfish Floral Weekly Planner
Day Designer Weekly Time Table
Simplified Planner Weekly
Buttoned Up Weekly Strategy
Mommy Tracked Week at a Glance
Weekly Goals
Daily
Get Buttoned Up 24 Hour Daily Docket
Get Buttoned Up 18 Hour Daily Docket
Day Designer Daily
Simplified Planner Daily
Scattered Squirrel Daily Planner
Scattered Squirrel Simply Daily Agenda
To Do Lists
Snapfish To Do List
Important Tasks Lists (Snapfish)
Simplified Planner Long Checklist Brain Dump
Simplified Planner Sunday Checklist
Buttoned Up Too Many To Do’s
Food/Meals
Colorful Weekly Meal Planner
Get Buttoned Up Exercise and Meal Tracker
Get Buttoned Up Weekly Meal Planner
Snapfish Grocery List
Day Designer Grocery List
Day Designer Weekly Meal Planner
Simplified Planner Go-To Meal Ideas
Simplified Planner Single Recipe Printable
Simplified Planner Food and Fitness
Weekly Food and Fitness Tracker
Notes/Brainstorm Pages
Day Designer Notes Page
Simplified Planner Lined Paper Brain Dump
Simplified Planner Blank Page Brain Dump
Simplified Planner Quadrant Brain Dump
Simplified Planner Grid Paper Brain Dump
Goals Task Flow Chart
Budget
Monthly Spending Tracker
Money Manager Essentials
iHO Budget Printable
Home Organization
Day Designer Important Contact Info
Day Designer Key Organizer (Meant for people with their own business who have to key track of a lot of different locks/keys)
Simplified Planner Party Planning Checklist
Buttoned Up Cleaning List
Buttoned Up Pantry Inventory
Birthday Party Organizer
Chores List
Miscellaneous
Day Designer Summer 2015 Bucket List
Simplified Planner 2015 At A Glance (1)
Simplified Planner 2015 At A Glance (2)
Simplified Planner 2016 At A Glance
Simplified Planner Borrowed Items List
Simplified Planner Get Uncluttered Flowchart
Simplified Planner Gratitude List
Simplified Planner Daily Devotional
Yearly Master Goals List
Bundles
1 2 3 4
An awesome way to give children days of clean drinking water!
UNICEF’s tap project is back! Funded by Aqua di Gio, all you have to do is open this link on your phone (the url is: uniceftapproject.org ), and not touch it. For every 15 minutes you leave your phone alone, a child receives a day’s worth of drinking water for free.
Please please please check out this project, it’s awesome and dear to my heart. I know a lot of people aren’t able to donate when they want to, here you can do so without having to be torn.
Please share this project. Reblog. Like. Tell people about it, get them talking, there aren’t many like this around.
Because it’s help me to study and it give water to people in need
This is so cool and amazing and everyone should know about it!! Also helps keep you off your phone AND help children!!! Check this out xx
How I Manage My Time
(Image credit to ME: PLEASE DO NOT REPOST)
Hi all!
I’ve had quite a number of asks wanting some time management tips, so I thought I’d make a post about my time management plan!
1ST RULE: Break Long-term Tasks into Short-term Tasks
So on Friday evening, I sit down with a piece of paper and write down the heading: BIG TASKS, and list the major tasks for the weekend + following week under the heading.
Then I break each of these tasks into smaller pieces where I can. (Tests&essays are already planned for, using the study time planner I posted last week.)
Then I categorise each task as one of the following 4 categories:
1. Urgent and important 2. Important but not urgent 3. Urgent but not important 4. Not urgent and not important.
IMPORTANT task is something that has to be done. There are consequences if it isn’t done.
URGENT task has a deadline, and can’t be caught up with once the deadline has passed.
I made the following sets of questions to aid in categorising the tasks.
So from my example:
my philosophy essay is due on Monday; therefore it is urgent. If I don’t hand this essay in, I may fail my course; therefore it is important.
My mom’s birthday is soon, so I want to send her a card. This task is important, but not urgent; I can send it anytime, as long as she gets it before her birthday.
My dancing class is urgent; if I miss this practice session I can’t catch up later, since they move on anyway in the next session. But since I’m admittedly not committed to dancing, missing the lesson will not have huge consequences. It is technically not important.
My friends and I want to have a movie night sometime. This task is not important - it has no serious consequences attached to it even if it doesn’t happen. It is not urgent - we can throw it anytime we want.
I write the category number next to the task.
Once I am done categorising, I copy the tasks onto the following template:
Like this!
(If you guys want the time-square template, it can be found here, or here.)
2ND RULE: Task Decides Time
What I do next is assign X-amount of hours to each task. The number of hours I assign to each task depends on its category!
The minimum ratio that I have set between the number of hours assigned to the 4 categories is 4:2:2:1.
i.e. Category 1 tasks must take up AT LEAST twice as many hours as category 2 or 3 tasks, and AT LEAST quadruple the amount of hours for category 4 tasks.
This ratio, of course, varies from week to week. But as long as the ratio is bigger than 4:2:2:1, I’m happy.
This week being a test week and all, there is a lot of work to be done so category 1 is pretty full. (plus the birthday party contributed significantly to category 3)
Next step is to divide these hours over the days of the week. Obviously I have to put the deadlines into consideration, and my set schedules (like lectures).
I assign a task/part of task to each day, and a number of hours to spend on that task.
I don’t, however, specify the time.
I personally find that time-specific schedulers don’t work for me, simply because of the fact that I suck at sticking to the times. It means that if I don’t finish your task by the set time (eg. study maths at 11:00am), that task is left hanging because I have to move onto the next task for the next hour (write essay at 12:00pm). This creates a build-up of incomplete work and is simply NOT efficient. That’s why I don’t use them.
Everyday I keep my list of tasks in my head, and complete them one by one whenever I have the time.
The goal is to get all of the tasks done before I go to bed.
Unless there is a time constraint attached (eg. meetings, or closing times for shops), whether I complete the task (especially studying) during lunchtime or before I go to bed doesn’t matter too much.
I draw a weekly planner into my bullet journal page.
Then I divide the tasks among the days!
I then transfer these tasks onto my daily bullet journal pages throughout the week.
3RD RULE: Leave Room For Compromise
I’m only human. I always end up doing something wrong and leaving some tasks incomplete during the week.
To compensate for this, I do 2 things:
1. Abandon low-priority tasks
If I had category 1 and category 4 tasks left incomplete for example, and I simply had no time to do both things, I’d give up the category 4 task and give my undivided attention to the high-priority task! I have to know what I need to sacrifice for the greater good.
2. Integrate “catch-up time” into your plan
Sometimes you can’t give up any of the tasks. CRISIS! To prevent situations like this, you should plan some “free time” into your week so that you can use them to catch up with things you are behind with. So my plan should technically never look full.
This has been another long post…
I hope you guys foundd this post helpful! Inbox me if you have any questions :)
-Gia
HOW TO STAY AWAKE IN CLASS
Shower before class. Have a 9 a.m. class? Hop out of bed in the morning and head straight for the shower. It’ll wake you right up! Plus, your classmates will probably thank you.
Bring a water bottle, and drink plenty of H2O. Staying hydrated is a key factor in staying awake. Try putting ice in your water bottle; the cold water will keep you lively and alert.
Go to the bathroom. Walk off the sleepiness by taking a trip to the bathroom. The process of walking will get the blood circulating again. And don’t forget to take a stretch break while you’re in the hallway.
Bring eye drops. It’s hard to stay wide-eyed and awake when your eyes are dry and irritated from the lack of sleep. When they’re feeling dry, splash a couple drops in them. You’ll feel more refreshed and your eyes will be grateful.
Sit in the front row, or at least in the middle! The closer you are to the professor, the less likely you are to fall asleep due to volume. Not to mention the fear of getting caught dozing off will keep you wide awake!
Take note. If you are daydreaming, eventually that will turn into real dreaming when you fall asleep. It might be hard when you are so tired, but taking notes during class can help keep you awake. It will keep you focused on the class material and less focused on how tired you are.
Pressure points: Two of the best, and conveniently subtle, pressure points to keep you up are your earlobes and wrists. For your ear, while it may look like you’re just learning your cheek on your wrist, rub the area right above your lobe (or where a traditional ear piercing would be) between your thumb and index finger. Not only is it a fine motor movement to keep you active, but also invites blood to rush up towards your ear, and therefore, to your head. Or putting the inside of your wrists against something cold: the metal bar of your desk, the desktop, your laptop. The pressure point here will keep you awake!
Small, repetitive movements: Foot tapping and chewing gum, just like rubbing the pressure point in your ear, “wakes up” those muscles, returning blood to those areas and reinvigorating your blood circulation.
Hold your breath for a few moments. Every time you feel like you are falling asleep, hold your breath to a count of 100. You will become restless and more wakeful while you hold your breath. When you start breathing again, you’ll feel relieved and awake.
Tap your feet and drum your fingers. Even these slight movements will help get your circulation moving and keep you from falling asleep.
Avoid consuming too much sugar. Sugar will give you a short energy boost followed by a prolonged descent into sleepiness. Try a healthy energy boosting snack instead, for example, carrots. Carrots are a good energy booster, they’re healthy and won’t drain you of energy.
Snap a hair tie. Okay, this is a weird method but I swear it works for me. Seeing as I always have a hair tie on my wrist, anytime I feel myself falling asleep, I just snap the hair tie against my wrist to keep me awake. It doesn’t really hurt, but it is enough to keep you alert. Next time you feel like snoozing, just try it to see if it works for you.
Time is of the essence or whatever idiom you use to make a connection. The point is as a college student or even a high school student, you will be busy and you will have 2-3 projects due in a week’s span, papers due, and homework due. You’re stressed and overwhelmed. Fear not, my over-worked fellow student! Here are some tips to help you manage your time and get all those projects, papers, and readings done.
Do Not Procrastinate- This is a number one rule for any student, or it should be. We all procrastinate. Don’t lie to yourself saying you have never done it. If you know you have a paper due next week, you better get to it!
Break things into smaller chunks- Projects, papers, and assignments seem more manageable if you break up things into chunks. For example, I have to write a lab report that is due next week. I will write the introduction and methods section today, results tomorrow, and discussion/conclusion the day after. See? Instead of thinking you need to get it all done in one day and sit in the library for hours, you can just break it into chunks. You can also do different chunks of assignments more effectively and get things done quicker.
Do not multitask- Multitasking doesn’t work and there are studies that have proven multitasking is worse for productivity. Or says some crack science. I don’t know, but I do know that when I “multitask” I get more overwhelmed and I just lose focus. Work on one assignment at a time, and focus solely on that assignment.
Shut off social media- This is the biggest time waster I have ever seen. Literally, I thought I only spent 10 minutes on Tumblr and it turned into 30 minutes. On your pomodoro break of 5 minutes, call you friend, family, or maybe read a pleasure book. Don’t get on social media until your longer break.
Use a planner, calendar, to-do list, or whatever- Just have something that you can use to know your deadlines and an ability to check things off when they are done. I find having a list works for me, because I can plan things out and I follow a physical list better than a mental list.
Prioritize your assignments/projects/etc.- Do you really need to work on that homework assignment that’s due in two weeks or should you be studying for that exam in a few days? Learn what is more pressing and will affect your grade more.
Stop complaining about not having enough time- Some where I read or heard we waste more time complaining than actually executing what we need to do. Stop complaining and get to work!
Have a set time of waking up and a set time of ending your work- Having a set schedule every day that you follow promotes a more productive lifestyle. If you wake up at 6 am everyday and end your “working day” (stop homework and school stuff), you’ll find you can fit in your hobbies, exercising, and pleasure reading.
Take mini breaks during the weekday, but take longer breaks on the weekend, evenings, and holidays- Mini breaks allow you to recharge and longer breaks allow you to help stay productive long term.
Sleep! Sleeping is important and it solves everything. End of story.
Batch your work together- If you have things related to school, set an hour and a half for that and then things for paying bills, checking emails, checking accounts, or whatever, set aside an hour.
Have a buffer time between task- Do not schedule things too close together, give yourself about 5-10 minutes in between tasks.
Being a perfectionist is not to your advantage- I understand you want to do things “perfect”, but in that extra 15 minutes you spend fussing about the details on a powerpoint could be better spent on another assignment. I am not saying to turn in a crap assignment, but if you have three other things on your to-do list that require immediate action, you might want to refocus yourself.
Those are my helpful tips on learning to manage your time effectively in school without feeling like you need twenty of you. Good luck!
ALL STUDYBLRS
i just want to be sure about something. just because we are running a studyblr it doesnt mean we have to be the top student. it doesnt mean we should always have the highest grades. in fact, i didnt even study in high school until this year. but now im back, im trying and this is what matters. we are all trying to do something in our lifes. and we should be proud of nothing but this. we can fail, we can cry and we can suck sometimes too. we can have the lowest grades and we can really mess up. what makes us studyblrs is not being the top student, its what we do at the end of the day. cause at the end of the day no matter what happens we came here and motivate each other. thats the best thing a human can do to others; to inspire. i just want all of you to let things go&relax. cause we are all doing amazing.
(also i want to hug all of you but it seems like impossible so yeah)
GUYS THIS WAS WORTH 80% OF MY FINAL EXAM GRADE FOR OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT AND I GOT AN A
This is the good grades Pepe. Even if you don’t reblog this just his presence on your dash will give you better grades.
AP Cram Packets Galore!
Someone on the Internet consolidated this list and sent it to me. So so helpful! GOOD LUCK everyone!
Art History Smarthistory: a multimedia web-book about art and art history Course-notes Barrons pdfs Biology AP Biology Exam Guide Chapter Review Giant Review Sheet Calculus AB & BC Cheatsheet (AB & BC) Stuff You MUST Know Cold for AP Calc (AB) If you see that, do this (AB)
EDIT: When you see that, do this
Chemistry AP Chemistry Notes Podcasts Quick Review Comparative Government and Politics Government Comparisons Cramsheet Study Sheet Computer Science Review: Part 1, Part 2 English Language Rhetorical Strategies AP Language Review Environmental Science Vocab to Know Tips APES Review European History STUDY GUIDES Exam Review Sheets French Language Cram packet Human Geography Course-notes Macroeconomics Every Graph You Need To Know (YouTube) Cram packet Microeconomics Cue cards Study guide
Physics B & C Cram sheet (B) Equations (C Mech) Equations (C Mech) Unit Notes (C Mech) Unit Notes © Unit Notes © Equations © Psychology Crib notes Cram packet Quizlet sets Statistics Cram packet Inference Procedures AP Stats formulas U.S. Government Cheat Sheet Review Materials U.S. History Cram Packet: part 1, part 2 The Giant AHAP Review Unit study guides Quizlet sets Quick Review The Comprehensive AP US History Study Guide World History Cram Packets and Review Sheets Cram packets by era Course-notes Mr. Hubbs History Reviews Released MC and review books Kiwiasian’s site ‒ released MC exams, review books in pdf Chilldude’s collection ‒ released MC exams, review books, textbooks in pdf
(note: NOT MY STUFF. The MC exams have been officially released by College Board. None of these materials were acquired through illegal means.)
best thing ever
EDIT 12/1/14: I was going through this and realized the AP Calculus “If you see that, do this” link doesn’t work anymore, so I crossed it out and replaced with another one I saw online. Let me know if it’s helpful.
for every high school student studying for ap tests:
here are the dates
studying tips if you need help
make a to do list that actually works
block distracting websites
listen to calming sounds
go to a coffee shop to work in
make some healthy study snacks
motivate yourself to hit the books
learn pretty much everything
cram packets for every ap test
learn test taking strategies
calm down if you’re stressed
what to do when your day sucks
pull an all nighter and still be functional
be prepared the day of the test!
how to look like u werent just crying in the bathroom
hold a cold rag/tissue to your eyes and anywhere else that tends to get red or blotchy for two minutes
regulate your breathing so your blood flow evens out
fix your makeup and make sure you’re not sweaty
go back out and live a lie
REBLOG TO FUCKING SAFE A LIFE OH MY GOD
whoop there it is
If you white n you wanna help post this
Free Printables Masterpost
Printables make the studyblr community more organized and of course there are so many resources! Here is a masterpost involving printables I have found and some I have used :)
studygene printables (note taking, to-do, weekly, and sticky notes)
theorganisedstudent printables (daily, weekly, monthly, hourly, essay, and study planners)
Calendar printables (you can customize the calendar with whatever dates you want including international, national, local, and your birthday events)
Snapfish printables
I Heart Organizing printables (includes family printables for kids)
Brit-Co Free Printables
Printable To-Do List (hundreds of printables!)
Printable Planners
High school and college assignment planner
PassionPlanner
elkstudies school supply list printable
hexaneandheels time management quadrants printables
studyinstivation printables
thehappinessplanner bucket list and habit changing printables
Printable Budget lists
College budget printable
kimberlystudies printables (goal sheets, personal safety plan, weekly planner, 100 words high school students should know, today’s action plan)
study-well printables (to do lists, planners)
Updates:
living-that-library-lifestyle printables (planners, to-do lists, and mind maps)
strive-for-da-best printables (summer study plan, semester pack, and note taking)
Those are the ones I have found and some I have used. I want to make sure there is a variety of printables available to the studyblr community. If you have printables, please inbox me your link so I can add you to the list!
To help you get organised for school next month :)
surviving an ap class can be one of the hardest things to do in high school. i’m here to help you out! i’ll add some general tips at the end of the post.
sciences
biology crash course
bozeman podcasts (incredibly to the point and focused)
huuuuge review sheet
quizlet vocab (1013 terms!)
intro to the bio exam
final reviews (1) (2)
chemistry crash course
notes on all topics
more notes on everything
bozeman podcasts
anion/cation review quizlet
vocab quizlet
environmental science vocab
part 1 of a 6-part final review (all linked through that)
final review sheet
part 1 of a 2-part physics c review
mechanics review
mechanics equation quizlet
TONS of in-depth review
physics ½ cheat sheets
khanacademy review
physics 1 flashcards
physics 2 flashcards
arts
art history notes
khanacademy review
quizlet review
music theory flashcards
course notes
practice exams + tons of review notes
maths
calc ab must knows
cheat sheet
quizlet review
topic review
calc bc final review
cheat sheet
quizlet review
computer science review (part 1) (part 2)
quizlet vocab
stats cram packet
formulas
quizlet review
all languages
english lit course notes
vocab quizlet
review notes
course notes
english lang review
notes
vocab quizlet
chinese lessons
how to ace the test
food + travel vocab
french lessons
quizlet vocab
acing the exam
spanish lessons
etymology
key vocab
latin review
handouts + powerpoints
nouns
japanese lessons
review
kanji
italian lessons
a teacher on quizlet with extensive ap italian review
german lessons
review
all vocab
history + social sciences
comparative gov + politics quizlet
study guide
this teacher tells you what to study
european history study notes
resources
interactive studying!!!
videos made by an ap euro teacher
human geography quizlet
more interactive studying!!!
macroecon 10 concepts to know
study guide
even more interactive studying!!!
microecon quizlet
so much interactive studying!!!
study notes
psych resource masterpost by my fave
extensive vocab
us gov + politics study notes
resources
tons of vocab
crash course
us history study guides
resource masterpost
crash course
world history masterpost of resources also by my fave
vocab
course notes
general advice
if you made it down here: good job that was a lot of scrolling
do not procrastinate! time management skills are so key to doing well. start a bullet journal (my tag) (sareena’s masterpost), start a studyblr (sareena’s masterpost), and just learn how to schedule your time well (sareena’s masterpost)
get good sleep. i looove sleepyti.me because i always wake up so alert.
take notes. if you don’t think you need to, do it anyway.
and, most importantly, take care of yourself. you can’t do well (or anything) if you’re not drinking water, eating, and sleeping. put your needs first.
Love the chem crash course, notes & podcast
Jackie Chan is like a 13 year old boy on Facebook
This post makes me happy
Listening to music while studying is proven to stimulate your senses and keep you focused. Here are some of my fave tunes lol:
Classical:
https://play.spotify.com/track/0NuqOvYcOo12f0QVa7j6OP
https://play.spotify.com/track/3EpRPjuf7iKzTK31WxLXDg
https://play.spotify.com/track/6V1ON7NF2WSwKH77YTvECG
https://play.spotify.com/track/2H9f13gIms2aPfgSroSeRj
https://play.spotify.com/track/09MCg4z1xcNe77V2pPeUjR
Not Classical?:
https://play.spotify.com/track/0pegFWSUOTiG0sLVEfxtvA
https://play.spotify.com/track/6obMmMuVhvB0VMTZa5EJIP
https://play.spotify.com/track/451GvHwY99NKV4zdKPRWmv
https://play.spotify.com/track/2CzWeyC9zlDpIOZPUUKrBW
https://play.spotify.com/track/3s4U7OHV7gnj42VV72eSZ6
https://play.spotify.com/track/7yq4Qj7cqayVTp3FF9CWbm
https://play.spotify.com/track/2MeNSNQa0vSkGOq9bCrhmq
https://play.spotify.com/track/7fvgzmfXxrdTcrL3xh2cBD
https://play.spotify.com/track/0efT4YKQLQx2YHbp6vgRX8
https://play.spotify.com/track/7q0aQpiLv5tIsupcgQ3Ny4