15.03.2016 My desk is getting progressively messier…
Looking forward for uni to start again, think it's time to get my studyblr back up and running 🚀
Keni
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Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

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izzy's playlists!
Jules of Nature
occasionally subtle
Stranger Things
Today's Document

if i look back, i am lost
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
$LAYYYTER
trying on a metaphor

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@trying-for-a-triumph
15.03.2016 My desk is getting progressively messier…
Looking forward for uni to start again, think it's time to get my studyblr back up and running 🚀
3 Study Methods You Should Use More Often
This was originally for an article writing assignment, but I thought “why not write something I can also post on my blog?” so here are three study methods that I haven’t seen a lot of in the studyblr community but are definitely worth mentioning.
The Leitner System
Flash cards have remained one of the most popular ways to study. Some people use them to memorize vocabulary, remember answers to specific questions, or even associate dates with events. Although the use of flash cards is convenient, their effectiveness has been reduced due to most people’s habits of prioritizing each card equally and therefore spending too much time memorizing the information on them.
The Leitner System, created by a German popularizer of science named Sebastian Leitner, is a more efficient method of studying that implements the concept of spaced repetition. All the cards start off in one pile. You would first scan through these cards, then test yourself. Each card you answer correctly goes to a second pile, while those you answer incorrectly should be revised then placed at the bottom of the pile. When you review the cards in the second pile and get them correct, they will be promoted to a third pile. An incorrect card will always get demoted to the first pile, even if they had previously been promoted to the last pile.
The reason why this method is so effective is that you end up reviewing the first pile of cards more frequently—the cards you don’t know very well. Some people choose to review their Stack 1 cards every day, Stack 2 cards every other day, Stack 3 cards once every three days, and so on.
Once all your cards have been promoted to the highest box, study them thoroughly and then start over. The continuous revision trains your speed so that you may reach fluency, which allows you to recall the information faster.
Timed Memorization
The name tells it all: you memorize a certain text within a time limit, normally around five to ten minutes depending on your fluency and memorization abilities. When the timer starts, you begin memorizing. When time is up, you flip to the next page, even if you haven’t finished the previous page yet. Continue until you’ve gone through all your material.
Timed memorization helps you to discipline yourself because your brain thinks that there’s no time for messing around; you have to do this here and now. Make sure to repeat the things you missed and revise everything frequently. This method is actually one of the most effective for cramming as it gives a better coverage than if you spend a whole half hour memorizing one subtopic.
The Memory Palace or Mind Palace
Sound familiar? In BBC’s Sherlock, the ‘highly functioning sociopath’ uses this method to remember vital information and facts. A mind palace is a systematic arrangement of information, each detail corresponding to a specific object in a familiar place. To ensure that you really remember everything, the objects have to appear shocking and conspicuous.
Here’s an example: if I wanted to memorize “crimson, 11, delight, petrichor (the smell after rain)”, aside from imagining Amy Pond or the Doctor saying it, I would first choose a place, let’s say my school. I’d imagine myself walking up to the front gate and seeing that the entire building has been painted the color of blood—crimson. The building would then rise as though it were lifted from the earth and crumble into rubble, controlled by Eleven, the character from Stranger Things. Now, since I can’t really picture delight specifically, I’d probably end up visualizing a colossal sign that simply reads “delight” posted in front of my school. As for petrichor, I’d imagine curves rising out of the puddles on the asphalt after a rainy night, a visual representation of the smell of the rain. Of course, these visualizations have been created to suit my memory. (I wouldn’t know if you watched Stranger Things.)
I used this method when memorizing case studies for geography, although I chose to visualize fictional places from television series and cartoons. Some people do opt to create artificial places, but these often become blurry and are easily forgotten.
As with any study method, repetition is vital to storing the information in your long-term memory. Visit your “palace” as often as you can. Soon enough, you’ll remember the data as well as you remember the place associated with the data.
So there you have it, three lesser known methods of studying that have proven to be immensely efficient. Now, there is no “correct” way to study, but there are methods that can ease your learning process.
•19.6.17•Day ?/100• I only have one more exam left and it’s so nice today that I’m studying outside for once. Good luck to everyone sitting exams. I’m sure you’re all doing great and that the hard work is paying off now!
01 / 07 / 17 • Two more days left of winter break and I have barely finished anything early like planned because we’re so busy with packing for the move. Finished this spread though! New year resolutions. May 2017 be good to us. 🌼🌿
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@special-agent-tits-akimbo
Screenshot posts like this stress me out so much because CHARGE YOUR PHONE I FEEL UNSAFE.
So, I'm speaking to a naive Korean and we are the same age, do I talk in 존댓말 even though she speaks to me in 반말 or ask if she is comfortable with me doing this first? (If that makes sense). Love your blog by the way!
Even though you’re the same age, it is still very common to be using 존댓말. However, if you want to switch to 반말 it is probably better to ask, even though they might already be using 반말, since an abrupt change could appear rude..
To ask when you are the same age, you can say something like:
우리 말 놓을까요? Shall we lower our speech?
말 편하게 해도 되죠? I can speak comfortably, right?
If you are younger, you could say:
말 놔도 돼요? May I lower my speech?
말 편하게 해도 돼요? May I speak comfortably?
If you are older, you can say:
말 놓으셔도 돼요. You can lower your speech.
말 편하게 하셔도 돼요. You can speak comfortably.
Please, let’s not ignore this one….
30•04 | 12/100
today i got back intro brush lettering after months of not doing it. ive missed doing this so much and im thinking of getting new brushes u~u
17/12/16 7:08 PM // brainstorming title ideas, thought I’d share it with you guys 💕
Costa study sessions are the best ☕️
September spread :)
45/100 days of productivity + SAT 9.24.16 // 3:48pm
theme of the week: claude monet. september artist (4/4);;;; finishing off this month’s artist theme with monet’s pretty color palletes +++ got evaluated on taking vitals last week;;; will be evaluated on intraoral and extraoral exams + chair set-up and clean-up next week! work those gloves ಥ⌣ಥ
educational youtube channels:
for when the burnout is real and all you really wanna do is lie in bed and watch things but you gotta at least try to study. these are mostly channels i’ve watched and subscribed to! (updated 17/12/2015)
sciences
veritasium
it’s okay to be smart
pbs space time
crash course: astronomy
crash course: ecology
crash course: biology
crash course: chemistry
crash course: anatomy and physiology
crash course: psychology
the school of life: sociology
the school of life: psychotherapy
scishow
scishow space
asapscience
minute physics
minute earth
khan academy
the brain scoop
sexplanations
healthcare triage
sixty symbols
periodic videos
deep sky videos
literature / art
crash course: literature
the school of life: literature
the school of life: art/architecture
art assignment
thug notes: shakespeare explained
thug notes: classic literature
history / geography / government
crash course: world history (season one)
crash course: world history (season two)
crash course: us history
it’s history: the industrial revolution
it’s history: the history of pirates
it’s history: battlefields (military history)
it’s history: the cold war
the school of life: history
alternate history hub
crash course: intellectual property
crash course: economics
crash course: u.s. government and politics
geography now
the school of life: political theory
it’s history: the history of china
it’s history: weapons of mass destruction
it’s history: the history of sex
extra credits: extra history
khan academy: history
khan academy: american civics
the great war
tom richey: ap euro review
tom richey: ap us history review
cgp grey
math
numberphile
khan academy
vihart
philosophy
the school of life: philosophy
the school of life: eastern philosophy
philosophy tube
8-bit philosophy
misc / no particular subject
crash course: big history
ted-ed
smarter every day
in a nutshell
vsauce
dnews
test tube news
test tube plus
seeker daily
the good stuff
thoughty2
how to adult
mental floss
27.08.16
anddd done!! i finally stopped running away from cell division :’) it was a super wild session of why does that oval look like a guava (;▽;) /// studygram
i should make a low-effort cookbook
like you get those ‘i hate to cook! 101: easy meals for the kitchen novice!’ and it still wants you to make a three-cheese spinach casserole
mine would be like
did you know you can put chocolate chips on a spoonful of peanut butter and obtain the perfect snack
did you know if you crack some eggs into your pasta sauce and stir there’s more protein in it so you can go longer without having to make another goddamn meal
did you know you can mix a cup of cooked rice to any condensed soup instead of water and now you have dinner and breakfast
also put cheese on it
put cheese on fucking everything
and finally here’s a list of things you can microwave in a short enough time that you won’t walk out of the kitchen, go back to bed, fall asleep for four hours, and totally forget you attempted a lunch
frozen pizza is expensive but! biscuits in a can + last dregs of jar of tomato sauce + some shredded mozzarella cheese = EIGHT MINIPIZZAS
dump all your chinese delivery into a hot pan and crack two eggs into it, stir, now it is soft and good
if you add a kraft single to mac and cheese from the box it’s magically more delicious (and if you also add hot sauce then it’s spicy)
nachos: chips + shredded cheese + salsa + rummage in fridge in case there’s other things? and then under the broiler for a minute or two. if it’s hot it counts as a meal! works good on stale chips.
an incomplete list of vegetables that won’t instantly rot on you: anything frozen, cauliflower, cherry tomatoes (they get wrinkly but u can still eat them), carrots, onions…i throw away a lot of veggies that have gone soft :(
i love parchment paper. $4 for a roll but lay it down on ur baking sheet and know you’ll never have to scrub cheese or cookie crumbs off it again. perfect for cooking with low spoons. nothing sticks to it!
also: mug cakes also also: if you cook rice you might as well dump some canned tomatos and canned beans in it. TADA NUTRITIONALLY COMPLETE MEALS in the list of foods that last: apples. apples can last an entire fucking winter. also also also: cottage cheese + bell peppers + crackers = what I ate for dinner for like a year
1. You cook the rice in a pot. No spices, no nothing, just water oil and rice.
2. Just before it’s ready, when there’s about a pinkie fingernail’s worth of water on the top, add in a tablespoon of peanut butter.
3. Stir. Cook the rest of the way.
4. It’s a meal! It has carbs and protein, it’s filling, it tastes good and it looks and feels like a legitimate dish, which is great for lifting the spirits a bit.
5. If you feel fancy, add a teaspoon of honey or a handful of crushed peanuts.
Alt., mix the rice with lentils. Cereal (rice, wheat) + legume (lentils, beans) = complete protein. Most people’s bodies will accept that in lieu of animal products.
Since no-one explained how to cook rice: (1) put bit of oil in pot, heat up on medium flame, (2) add 1-1.5 cup rice, mix up and add a bit of salt (you may need to reduce flame), (3) while you’re doing that, boil water in an electric pot, (4) add 2 cup water for each 1 cup rice; reduce flame a few seconds before you do that and mind the steam won’t hit you, (5) cover and set a 20min timer.
Pasta: (1) boil water, lots of water (covered pot goes fast; you can also use an electric pot for a shortcut and bring to a full boil on the stove - experiment), (2) up to 100 gr pasta per 1L water will work, but the more water per pasta the better, (3) reduce flame to medium (light bubbling), add pasta, set time to 10min, (4) check and add time as necessary - you may not need to.
Egg or bean noodled cook faster than pasta - like, half the time.
Easiest pasta sauce: 20-50gr of butter, melt; 1-2tbs lemon juice, homogenize; dump in pasta (and possibly peas, boiled from frozen). Taken 5min or under and will liven up pasta that’s been sitting in the fridge.
Easiest cream sauce: 1 standard (250ml) cream carton, 1 tsp shredded cheese (keeps well in freezer) or more, 1 tbs cottage cheese, spices to taste. Heat in a small pot on a small-to-medium flame while stirring constantly (if it’s too hot to stick a finger in, it’s too hot). Takes maybe 5-10min. Will keep in fridge up to 1 week.
Rice freezes well. Pasta doesn’t. Plain pasta (and most noodles) will last for up to a month in the fridge, though, and just dump it in the pan with some ketchup/tomato paste(+oil + water) and you’re good.
…nobody said that dry onion lasts? Dry onion lasts. Fried onion freezes well and keeps forever. So does diced garlic. If you like ‘em but worried about them going bad/don’t always have the time or spoons to deal with ‘em, there you go.
Fresh bread freezes well. Keep emergency bread in your freezer, sliced. It’ll thaw in the fridge/on the counter overnight, or you can stick a slice as-is in the toaster (just turn it up 1 notch relative to your usual preference).
Potatoes in their peel are the single most nutritious food. (You can, actually, survive on mashed potatoes.) A boiled potato will stay good in the fridge for a couple days. Boil partway (should still somewhat resist a fork), turn over/toaster oven on 150C (350F) or higher while you do the rest, slice potato(s), spread like deck of cards, brush oil over (with the sort of silicone brush one uses for eggs - costs next to nothing and you’ll be glad you got it), bit of salt, stick into oven and come back 20-40min later. Will re-heat well.
All of the following are good in eggs, just (1) dump them in the pan before the eggs, (2) the more you fluff up the eggs the betters: cubed semi-boiled potatoes, sliced/cubed tomatoes, tinned garbanzo beans (<-legume), tinned/frozen corn. Tinned and frozen stuff lasts forever. A pre-boiled potato and a couple eggs will save your ass on a cold, miserable morning.
3 shortbread cookies + 2 glasses of milk = 500kcal balanced dinner. Or breakfast.
1 cup cooked pasta + couple fluffed up eggs + shredded cheese (from frozen) to taste, in a stove-top pan or in the oven for ~20min = full meal.
Black lentils, cooked, will last nicely in the fridge - and unlike other legumes, they don’t need a pre-soak and only take 20min to cook. ½ bowl + 3 tbs oil + 2 tsp lemon juice + ¼ onion = dinner so nutritious you won’t believe it.
Cottage cheese and honey. No really. You only need a couple tsp honey for 250gr cottage tub.
1tbs peanut butter (flat as you can make it) + 3 tbs soy + 2 tbs maple/honey + 1 tsp vinegar = marinade for ~500gr of whatever. Takes ~5min to mix, 20min-2hr to soak, 5-10min to fry (non-stick pan and you don’t need oil). This + pot of rice (<-make while chicken/meat soaks) = lunch for a week. (Or dinner, if dinner’s your main meal.)
A tin of mayonnaise will last for months in the fridge. Hardboiled eggs last a nice while, too. 3 hardboiled eggs, chopped + 1tbs mayo + 1/3 onion chopped = 5min of work and egg salad for a few highly nutritious meals.
Ever make yourself hot chocolate? Make it with milk instead of water, for fuck’s sake. A large cup of hot chocolate is a legit small meal.
Buy broccoli and green beans frozen. For a couple dollars you can get a big enough bag of either to get at least 8-10 servings out of it and it keep for at least 6 months if you keep the bag closed. Buy a jar of chopped garlic in olive oil as well. That’ll keep in your fridge for months and adding a little bit to a handful of broccoli or green beans and sauteing(lightly browning them in a pan or pot on the stove) them together until everything is warm is a cheap, easy way to have a flavorful snack or meal.
Also, ramen, drop an egg and a handful of some kind of frozen veggie(the previously mentioned ones or even some mixed carrots and peas) it adds a lot of nutritional value to your ramen, makes it so much more filling, and makes it have way better flavor than plain ramen.
Buy a jar of Better than Bouillon. Amazon has them for as cheap as $2.99 a jar and one jar has enough in it to make a couple gallons of broth. Just one teaspoon of this stuff added to 1 cup of water will give you a deliciously broth for soup. Pick your flavor and drop whatever veggies or noodles you’ve got leftover in the fridge and you’ve got dinner. It’s also great to add to the water you’re cooking your rice in to give it some flavor as well.
Don’t buy boxed Kraft mac and cheese. It may seem like an easy approach but there is a cheaper approach. A 3 lb bag of macaroni noodles is only a couple dollars and you can get a 1 lb bag of the powdered cheese just like in Kraft for $10 on Amazon. I bought a bag of cheese powder that size and it lasted me more than a year and I made mac and cheese once a week. You can also mix it with milk and broccoli and you’ve got a great dinner of broccoli cheese soup.
My biggest tip for saving money on food is to make things that will freeze well. Say you make a pot of spaghetti. You could get 5 or 6 servings out of a full pot easily, if not more, but you’ll get tired of spaghetti before it’s gone. Stick servings in plastic baggies(which are fine to rinse and reuse!) and freeze them! Then you’ll be able to take out just the amount to eat for a meal and have some back up meals for when you’re loaded down with work, homework, etc and have no time to make a meal.
I… Really, reeeeally wish I’d seen this about 5 months ago. So rebloggin now so I can find it again.
If you’re low on money AND short on cooking time (or too exhausted after work to cook for more than a few minutes), get a slow cooker. Like…if you can’t afford one at Walmart (or wherever), there are usually some at Goodwill for like $5 (seriously). You know how much food you can make in a slow cooker?! Enough to feed a damn army. Aaaaaaand you can throw it on low, shove some ingredients in just before bed or when you wake up, and it’ll be ready after you come home from work/school, with plenty to refrigerate/freeze as leftovers. Just look up slow cooker recipes; I’m talking everything from chili, stew, and soup to hot sandwich fillings and roasts. Another slow cooker tip: it all tastes like whatever spices, veggies, etc you add to it. Buy cheap meat to throw in (if you’re making something meat-based)–it’ll be tender because of the slow-cooking and will taste just as good as expensive cuts. You can also make scrambled eggs in a mug in the microwave if you want to dirty fewer dishes–just make sure you add milk so the texture stays good. When I’m broke and/or fighting a depressive low I’ll throw ham (literally a single slice of ripped up lunch meat), whatever veggies I have in the fridge, cheese, two eggs, and some milk in a mug, pop some bread in the toaster, and, voila! a balanced meal, one dirty dish (two if you count the fork), and it only took 3-5min total (for the eggs, I recommend 1-2min in the microwave, stir, then another 1-2min in, and repeat if necessary). Easy casserole that freezes well and lasts forever? Mix a can of condensed broccoli cheddar soup and some cooked rice in a casserole dish, plop some cubed chicken in there, put cheese on top, shove it in the oven until the chicken is cooked through (usually like 20min on 400F).
If you’re really really broke (been there), see if there are churches in your area that do a community meal one night a week. Most do, and they’re almost always free. Like, I’m not even the tiniest bit religious and am queer as fuck, but I’ve done my fair share of church dining (granted, I also am a musician and do a lot of church gigs…but that’s how I found out about these community meals!). It’s usually you and a bunch of old people, but if you are okay dealing with happy old people who happen to love Jesus asking you about your life and smiling and telling you how happy they are to see a young/new face, it’s good food and a lot of it, and a night you don’t have to worry about your meal. Like, I know this started out as a cookbook, but I figure this is a good tip to attach to this post.
So long, August. 👋🏼 You were kinda crazy, but I loved ya anyway.