january monthly spread ✨
almost home
sheepfilms
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

roma★

Andulka
macklin celebrini has autism

titsay

Kaledo Art
Monterey Bay Aquarium
cherry valley forever

#extradirty
NASA
Show & Tell

Origami Around

shark vs the universe

Janaina Medeiros
we're not kids anymore.
KIROKAZE
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@studyblr-96-blog
january monthly spread ✨
Taking textbook notes is a chore. It’s tedious and boring and sometimes challenging, but hopefully these tips will help you improve your skill and shorten the time it takes you to do textbook notes!
Give yourself time: Realistically, you can’t knock out 30 pages of notes in 20 minutes. Take your time with textbook notes so they’re a good studying tool in the future. The general rule is to take how many pages you have to do and multiply it by 5: that’s how many minutes it’ll take you to do the notes.
Also, divide you notes up into manageable chunks to increase your productivity. I am personally a huge fan of using pomodoro timers, and I adjust the intervals for however long I need to.
Skim before you start taking notes: If time is an issue, don’t read your 40 page in depth before even picking up a pen, but make sure you know what you’re reading about by skimming a bit ahead of your notes. Read over section titles, and look at charts, maps, or graphs. Writing and highlighting as you read the chapter for the first time isn’t effective because you don’t know if a sentence will be important or not, so make sure you’re reading a paragraph or section in advance before writing.
Use the format they give you in the book to help take your notes: In a lot of textbooks, there will be a mini outline before the chapter itself that shows all the headings and subheadings. Those will be your guidelines! I find this super helpful because long chapters can be daunting to go into without any structure. If you don’t have one of those, use the headings and subheadings provided for you. If you haven’t already been doing this, it will help you so much.
Read actively: It’s so easy to “read” a textbook without digesting any information, but that is the last thing you want to do. Not only does it make taking notes a million times harder, but you’ll be lost in class discussions because you didn’t understand the reading. To keep from passively reading, highlight, underline, star any important information in the book itself.
Have a color coding system for highlighting or underlining and write down a key somewhere (here’s a few that you can adjust for your needs: x,x)
Use sticky notes or tabs to mark any questions or important points to come back to
Summarize important information and paraphrase: When taking the actual notes, don’t copy down full sentences word for word. Not only does writing full sentences waste a lot of time, it’s not an effective way to learn. If you can paraphrase the information, then you understand it. It’s also easier to study notes which are in your own words instead of textbook academia writing.
Be selective: You shouldn’t be writing down every fact that comes up in your textbook. If a fact ties into the bigger topic and provides evidence, then it’s probably something to keep, but you don’t need every piece of supplemental information (but do make sure you always write down the vocab). Learn your teacher’s testing style to help you decide what to write down. Could this be on the quiz/test? If the answer is yes, make sure you write it down.
Learn to abbreviate: Just like writing full sentences, writing out full words will waste time. Implement some shortenings (make sure to use ones that you’ll understand later!) into your notes. Some common ones are: b/c=because, gov=government, w/o=without, and here’s a great list of a ton of examples of abbreviations and shortenings.
Answer margin and review questions: A lot of textbooks have margin questions on every page or so that sum up what’s really important about that information. Make sure not to skip them because they’re really helpful for understanding. Write them down and answer them clearly in your notes. Most textbooks also have review questions after the chapter that check for reading comprehension, so make sure to answer those because they’ll show you if you really understood the chapter.
Don’t skip over visual sources: Maps, diagrams, illustrations, charts, and any other visuals in textbooks are so helpful. If you’re a visual learner, these things will be so essential to you and how you understand what you’re reading. Charts, tables, and diagrams sometimes also summarize information, so if you’re a visual learner it might benefit you to copy those down instead of writing it out.
Add visuals if it’ll help you: As said above, copying down charts, tables, illustrations, or diagrams can be super helpful for visual learners. They’re clear and concise, so pay attention to them.
Write your notes in a way that’s effective and makes sense to you: Mindmaps, Cornell notes, or plain outline notes are all really good forms of notetaking. Find which one works best for you to understand them and which one is most effective for your class, and use it (stuff on mindmaps and cornell notes).
Combine your class and textbook notes: If you rewrite your class notes, add in information you think is relevant from your textbook notes. Mark anything both your book and teacher said were important–you don’t want to forget any of that. If you don’t rewrite class notes, then put stars next to anything repeated.
This is super helpful!!
9 June 2016 ||
I am drowning in class work, but thankfully I love our library and have nothing against spending a lot of time there. Have a productive day, everyone!
Create a happy place :) XOXO, Amberess
Two exams last week, two more this coming week. At least these are my last before finals. I came across this photo from senior year pt. 1 before I had a study blog- I had to post, my bebe turns one year old today ! 🌱
when someone asks how you did on your finals
STUDYBLRS PLEASE
The date is December 11, 2017 that I’m writing this post.
If you are a 99% ACTIVE studyblr tumblr, PLEASE LIKE OR REBLOG THIS!
I’m reviving my account, but all of the people I follow are pretty much dead now. Help me out, studyblr community!
STUDYBLRS PLEASE
The date is December 11, 2017 that I’m writing this post.
If you are a 99% ACTIVE studyblr tumblr, PLEASE LIKE OR REBLOG THIS!
I’m reviving my account, but all of the people I follow are pretty much dead now. Help me out, studyblr community!
Forgot to post these! I noticed that making a timeline really helps me with history. ☺️
//november 23// some world history notes for ancient egypt
this past week has been so busy, and I’ve been lacking sleep but I am satisfied with my output tbh.
🎶Peek-A-Boo Red Velvet🎶
A sneak peek into my dorm room ❤️
Can we as the studyblr community stop glorifying staying up until 3am?
Want to know the downsides?
It’s bad for your health
Your brain can’t process the information you’ve studied (so an all-nighter will most likely do more harm than help you succeed)
The quality of what you’re working on will go downhill if you don’t take breaks
It is bad for your health!
Go to bed on time and give your brain and your health a break. Take care of yourselves!
Perfect desk
One day I hope my work space will be this perfect
beautiful lattes & pretty notebooks are all i need in life.
photo dump ;;
ig: gentlestudies 🌨✨