Study with me
https://youtu.be/Z6S2rzwl2pk
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@peace2o2
Study with me
https://youtu.be/Z6S2rzwl2pk
Study with me time lapse
https://youtu.be/4PG2fyGuJBA
Study with me
https://youtu.be/0GcphC27mdo
#studywithme #productivity
Study with me 📓
https://youtu.be/WKqYneFA3_Q
Let’s study together 📓🌟
https://youtu.be/DLWlwxL7M3o
#studywithme #productivity #quarantin
Let’s study together!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wAehzZChScM&feature=share
The angle is quite worrying haha
#studywithme #Quarantine #productiveity
[1-90] of productivity challenge
I dwell in possibility ~
Angel’s Official List of 50 Shows to Experience Before Your Inevitable Death
I know that not everyone has the time, money, or energy to see live theatre (and finding good productions of every single one of these shows near you would be difficult if not impossible), so when I say “experience”, I mean read the script, watch a film adaptation if there is one, listen to the soundtrack, read up on the production history, watch a professional recording if there is one, or a bootleg if there isn’t. All of that good stuff counts. I’ve also excluded Shakespeare’s works from the list because everyone should experience Shakespeare (particularly The Tempest and A Midsummer Night’s Dream) before they die. So, in no particular order, Angel’s Official List of 50 Shows to Experience Before Your Inevitable Death:
Musicals
1. A Chorus Line by James Kirkwood Jr. and Nicholas Dante
2. The Light in the Piazza by Craig Lucas and Adam Guettel
3. Spring Awakening by Steven Sater and Duncan Sheik
4. The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee by by Rachel Sheinkin and William Finn
5. Tuck Everlasting by Claudia Shear and Tim Federle
6. Wonderful Town by Jerome Chodorov and Joseph Fields
7. The Color Purple by Marsha Norman
8. In The Heights by Lin-Manuel Miranda and Quiara Alegría Hudes
9. Newsies by Alan Menken, Jack Feldman, and Harvey Fierstein
10. Merrily We Roll Along by George Furth and Stephen Sondheim
11. Show Boat by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II
12. Next to Normal by Brian Yorkey and Tom Kitt
13. Les Miserables by Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schönberg
14. Evita by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice
15. Chicago by John Kander, Fred Ebb, and Bob Fosse
16. Cabaret by John Kander, Fred Ebb, and Joe Masteroff
17. Ain’t Misbehavin’ by Murray Howitz and Richard Maltby Jr.
18. City of Angels by Larry Gelbart
19. West Side Story by Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim
20. Into The Woods by Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine
21. Hamilton by Lin Manuel Miranda
22. RENT by Jonathan Larson
23. Come From Away by Irene Sankoff and David Hein
24. Waitress by Sara Bareilles and Jessie Nelson
25. Spamalot by Eric Idle and John Du Prez
Straight Plays
1. The Language Archive by Julia Cho
2. Arsenic and Old Lace by Joseph Kesselring
3. The Bad Seed by Maxwell Anderson
4. Fences by August Wilson
5. Everybody by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins
6. Native Gardens by Karen Zacarias
7. I And You by Lauren Gunderson
8. Number the Stars by Lois Lowry, adapted by Douglas W. Larche
9. The Laramie Project by Moises Kaufman
10. Mr. Burns: A Post-Electric Play by Anne Washman
11. Peter and the Starcatcher by Rick Ellis
12. Jump by Charley Evon Simpson
13. A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry
14. The Pillowman by Martin Mcdonagh
15. Waiting For Godot by Samuel Beckett
16. Tiny Beautiful Things by Cheryl Strayed, adapted by Nia Vardalos
17. No Exit by Jean-Paul Sartre
18. Detroit by Lisa D’amour
19. The Deepest Trench by Chloe Whitehorn
20. The Ferryman by Jez Butterworth
21. Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller
22. Angels in America by Tony Kushner
23. A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams
24. Noises Off by Michael Frayn
25. Six Characters in Search of an Author by Luigi Pirandello
Might pass out after looking up all those authors, might fuck around and add a “why you should experience” line for each show. Idk yet.
It’s sad how much of what is taught in school is useless to over 99% of the population.
There are literally math concepts taught in high school and middle school that are only used in extremely specialized fields or that are even so outdated they aren’t used anymore!
I took calculus my senior year of high school, and I really liked the way our teacher framed this on the first day of class.
He asked somebody to raise their hand and ask him when we would use calculus in our everyday life. So one student rose their hand and asked, “When are we going to use this in our everyday life?”
“NEVER!!” the teacher exclaimed. “You will never use calculus in your normal, everyday life. In fact, very few of you will use it in your professional careers either.” Then he paused. “So would you like to know why should care?”
Several us nodded.
He picked out one of the varsity football players in the class. “You practice football a lot during the week, right Tim?” asked the teacher.
“Yeah,” replied Tim. “Almost every day.”
“Do you and your teammates ever lift weights during practice?”
“Yeah. Tuesdays and Thursdays we spend a lot of practice in the weight room.”
“But why?” asked the teacher. “Is there ever going to be a play your coach tells you use during a game that requires you to bench press the other team?”
“No, of course not.”
“Then why lift weights?”
“Because it makes us stronger,” said Tim.
“Bingo!!” said the teacher. “It’s the same thing with calculus. You’re not here because you’re going to use calculus in your everyday life. You’re here because calculus is weightlifting for your brain.”
And I’ve never forgotten that.
THIS.
When it’s taught right, learning math teaches you logic and how to organize your brain, how to take a problem one step at a time and make sure every step can bear weight before you move to the next one. Most adults don’t need to know integrals, but goddamn if I don’t wish everyone making arguments on the internet understood geometric proofs.
Scientific concepts broaden our understanding of how the world is put together, which does not mean that most adults ever really understand how light is refracted through a lens or why spinning copper wire creates electricity–and they don’t need to. But science classes in general are meant to teach the scientific method: how to make observations and use them to draw conclusions, how to test those conclusions, how to be wrong and grow stronger from it.
History isn’t about dates and names of battles, it’s about people, patterns, things we’ve tried before and ought to learn from. It’s about how everything is linked, how changing one circumstance can lead to changes in fifty others, cascading infinitely. Literature is about critical thinking, pattern recognition, learning to listen to what somebody is saying and decide what it means to you, how you feel about it, and what you want to do with it.
Some facts matter: every adult should know how to read a graph, how global warming works, some of the basic themes and symbols that crop up in every piece of fiction. But ultimately, content is less important later in life than context.
The good thing is, students who learn the content are likely to pick up at least some of the context, some of the patterns of thinking, even if they don’t realize it. (The unfortunate thing is how the current educational system prioritizes content so much that a lot of students, and a lot of adults, don’t see the point in learning either, and teachers are overworked and held to standardize test grading scales such that it’s hard for them to emphasize patterns of thinking over rote memorization, etc etc etc, but that is a whole different discussion.)
thank u <3
BILL NYE can’t stress the importance of Climate Change enough
I love it when people tell me about me because I have no idea who I am
Sixteen years ago, 23-year-old American peace activist Rachel Corrie was killed by an Israeli bulldozer that was preparing to demolish a Palestinian home in the Gaza Strip. Corrie has since become an icon of global solidarity with the people of Palestine.
Born on 10 April 1979 in Olympia, Washington, Corrie dedicated her life to defending Palestinian rights. In 2003, she went to the Gaza Strip as a member of the International Solidarity Movement. On 16 March 2003 in the Gaza Strip’s southern city of Rafah, Corrie stood before an Israeli bulldozer in hopes of stopping it from demolishing the home of a local Palestinian family. She was crushed to death when the bulldozer driver ran her over repeatedly, according to witnesses.
In a letter sent to her family from Gaza shortly before her murder, Corrie described the Palestinian suffering she witnessed. “No amount of reading, attendance at conferences, documentary viewing and word-of-mouth could have prepared me for the reality of the situation here,” she wrote. “You just can’t imagine it unless you see it.”
24/45 productivity challenge.
She is there~
23/45 productivity challenge.
Yess the last test before finals 🌻
22/45 productivity challenge.
I didn’t fail this challenge I was just taking a break or may be 2 days procrastinating 🙂
There is still enough time to study
21/45 productivity challenge.
We just warming up 👩🏻💻
20/45 productivity challenge.
I want to be the old me😔 the introvert I don’t like to be around people or better to say that I want to take a break of talking and being around them. How can I say that with out being rude?