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if i look back, i am lost
Not today Justin
we're not kids anymore.
Game of Thrones Daily
$LAYYYTER

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Kiana Khansmith
Sade Olutola
Acquired Stardust

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Sweet Seals For You, Always
trying on a metaphor

Love Begins
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
i don't do bad sauce passes

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@untwitch
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Until2022âs Comprehensive Guide to Getting Those Aâs
I. Weekdays
Wake up early, finish any leftover homework, review any difficult flashcards, drink some water and do some sort of exercise, finish packing your bag.
Get to class 20 minutes early. Youâll have time to set up, read over some old notes, drink some coffee, review your to do list, catch up with friends in your lecture, or just get the seat that you want.Â
Sit in the first or second row and leave your phone in your bag. Try and turn your notes into mind maps or flow charts as the lecture goes on. Note down case studies or examples, handy acronyms, or hints from the professor. You might get distracted and end up doodling, but itâs better than ending up on Instagram.
If you have gaps in between lectures, use them to do assignments or finish up notes. I always use the first part of my lunch break to finish my online quizzes so I donât have to worry about them when I get home. Youâll thank yourself when you get home that evening!Â
Find a good group of friends that you study well with, and try to teach a concept to them as if you were the professor. Use a whiteboard, or a piece of paper. Do your best impression of their voice. Then swap over. One of the best ways to learn is by teaching someone else.Â
If you have some free time and youâre by yourself, take the last topic you learnt and scribble out a quick outline. Then use your phone to record yourself explaining it, as if you were teaching a person who has never heard of it. Like I said, teaching someone else is an excellent way to learn - and youâll also have a bite-sized summary video to review before the test!
When you get home, note down any assignments or homework you were given that day. If itâs going to take less than 45 minutes to do it, then do it straight away. If itâs going to take longer, then make a start on it immediately. Then you can decide whether to keep working or whether you should finish it off the next day.Â
Take your lecture content for the day and turn it into flashcards - I use Anki, but Quizlet is also pretty good.
File away any notes or handouts appropriately, and do any ten-minute tasks, like quickly emailing your professor or reading a short chapter.Â
Go through your flashcards for the day and the previous days (order them based on how hard they were, so you know how often you should repeat them. Anki does this automatically.)
Pack your bag for the next day. Donât forget any assignments that have to be handed in, get your meals and outfit ready, put your water bottle in the fridge and make sure your room is tidy.
II. Â Weekends When Nothing is DueÂ
On Friday evenings, do all of your homework or small assignments. If your friends are going out, tell them youâll be there once youâre finished. Smash out anything and everything thatâs due that coming week, and if thereâs nothing, then whip out your list of assessments and pick the closest one. Smash one out that evening, even if itâs just a bad draft.
Allocate half a day to your readings. Make notes and diagrams, fill in the gaps in your notes, make flashcards out of the definitions or important bits.Â
Allocate another half day to your flashcards from that week. Make sure you interleave the subjects and use spaced repetition so youâre studying the hardest ones most frequently.Â
III. Weekends When You Actually Have Assessments Coming Up
Youâve been working ahead, regularly reviewing your notes via active recall using flashcards, and keeping on top of your homework and assignments - so you shouldnât be panicking too much.Â
Get out your revision notes, your textbook notes and your flashcards. Now put them all aside, and try to write down as much as you can remember from memory. If you have past exam questions, try to answer those. Get a friend (see I5) to test you on the content. Make sure you know your formulae, key concepts and definitions by heart.Â
If thereâs an assignment coming up, you should already have a draft ready, so just print that out, bring up the marking schedule if you have it and edit it to high heaven. Then type the edits out. Run it through Grammarly or a similar app. Send it to the friend I just mentioned, and ask them to read over it. Compare it to someone elseâs in your class. Make sure itâs backed up to iCloud or Google Drive. Once youâre happy (and donât overthink it!) then send it in and forget about it.
IV. Handy Hints
Always start your creative projects as soon as you get them. You can pull an essay out of your arse with six hours to spare, but you do not want to be designing a poster at 3am, trust me. Â Â
If you donât know it, it will be on the test. This is Sodâs Law. Google it, make your friends explain it to you, watch a Khan Academy video on it, send your professor a panicked email and ask them for a tutorial on it. Do every single question pertaining to it in your entire syllabus. Become An Expert âą on it.Â
Group projects are usually shit, but you will survive with the following steps:Â
Read up on Belbin team roles and work out which you are, and which the people in your team are likely to be. Then work out how you can best lever everyoneâs personality for the best possible result with minimal arguing, slacking, tears or last-minute panicking.Â
Determine the intended outcome: is the grade important, or is it intended to bring you together and build rapport and team communication skills?
If the point of the project is to work well as a team, then you need to focus on communicating well and kindly, supporting each other, thinking outside the box and having fun. Donât get too hung up on whether the final product is perfect. Instead, think about how well you would do if the professor threw away your assignment and graded you on what other people said about you, and act accordingly.Â
If itâs the output which matters - like a big final project - then you are going to have to be frank with each other about what youâre capable of. The person who has the best English skills will have to review and edit the entire project, even though itâs a lot of work. The person who has a maths background will need to do the statistical analysis because thatâs a technical job and the correct results are essential. The division of labour often wonât be equal, and if you want a good grade youâll just have to accept that and find tasks that can be delegated to those who are less capable.Â
Dali said âIntelligence without ambition is a bird without wings.â When Iâm demotivated, itâs usually because Iâve gotten bogged down in the details and lost sight of why Iâm working so hard and where Iâm going. Make a hot drink, pull out a couple of sheets of paper and a pen, and write down the date 5 years from today. Then just close your eyes and imagine what life would be like at that date if everything went exactly how you wanted it to, and start writing - put down every single minute detail. I can often spend ten straight minutes writing like this. Then have a read through and pick out exactly how the work youâre doing right now is steering you towards this vision of the ideal future. If it isnât, then you should probably rethink what youâre doing, and thatâs ok too.
entp / Chaotic good /Â Slytherin
Aesthetic for james-and-audreyÂ
thereâs such an unhealthy stigma, especially in academic communities, surrounding taking time off or dropping out. putting education above your health and well-being isnât okay and should not be the standard. obviously there are positives to school/college/uni, but the environment created by the education system can be so horrifically damaging in so many ways, and demonising stepping away from or leaving it only makes it worse. as much as education is important, your health and well-being are infinitely more so.Â
it is okay to take breaks. itâs okay to take a year off. itâs okay to leave if thatâs what you need to do. dropping out does not make you stupid, nor does it make you a failure. take care of yourself first and foremost. traditional education is not the only way to learn.
This is by far my favourite thing I've seen for this community. I feel so much pressure to read certain books that I haven't got the money to buy and I feel wrong talking about the ones I am reading. This community is great, and I know we all want to be pretentious and snobby, but let's use that for aesthetic purposes and not to put others down.
(Btw ironically enough I found this text post on Instagram, not Tumblr and now I'm reposting it to Tumblr because idk how to find the original)
The original creators: @read-and-be-merry @iammewhooaryou @narukoibito
running on tea, books, and the overwhelming urge to reinvent myself every couple of weeks
Cultural Dark Academia
After my last post about the lack of representation in academia, I felt it neccessary to provide some examples of what Iâm talking about. Obviously there are more countries in the world than I can list and provide books for, so for a quick list this is what I got. !! Keep researching !! If you have any more books by POC please reply them !! If a country isnât listed, that doesnât mean itâs not important, this is just what I could get together real quick. If I made any mistakes, please let me know, weâre all learning. We need to help each other end eurocentrism in academia, so value representation and educate yourselves đđđ
Chinese:
The Art of War by Sun Tzu
The Dream of the Red Chamber
The Water Margin
Romance of the Three Kingdoms
The Journey to the West
The Scholars
The Peony Pavilion
Border Town by Congwen Shen
Half of Man is Woman by Zhang Xianliang
To Live by Yu Hua
Ten Years of Madness by agent Jicai
The Field of Life and Death & Tales of Hulan River by Xiao Hong
Japanese:
A Personal Matter by Kenzaburo OĂ«
Pakistani:
Moth Smoke by Mohsin Hamid
How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia by Mohsin Hamid
Ghulam Bagh by Mirza Athar Baig
Masterpieces of Urdu Nazm by K. C. Kanda
Irani/Persian:
Rooftops of Tehran by Mahbod Seraji
Savushun by Simin Daneshvar
Anything by Rumi
The Book of Kings by Ferdowsi
The Rubiyat by Omar Khayyam
Shahnameh (translation by Dick Davis)
Afghan:
Earth and Ashes by Atiq Rahimi
A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini
Indian:
The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy
Aithihyamala, Garland of Legends by Kottarathil Sankunni
The Gameworld Trilogy by Samir Basu
Filipino:
Twice Blessed by Ninotchka Rosca
The Last Time I Saw Mother by Arlene J. Chai
Brazilian:
Night at the Tavern by Ălvares de Azevedo
The Seven by André Vianco
Don Casmurro by Machado de Assis
Colombian:
Chronicle of a Death Foretold by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Delirio by Laura Restrepo
ÂĄQue viva la mĂșsica! by AndrĂ©s Caicedo
The Sound of Things Falling by Jim Gabriel VĂĄsquez
Mexican:
Bless Me, Ultima by Rudolf Anaya
Adonis Garcia/El Vampiro de la Colonia Roma by Luis Zapata
El Complot Mongol by Rafael Bernal
Egyptian:
The Cairo Trilogy by Nahuib Mahfouz
The Book of the Dead
Nigerian:
Rosewater by Tade Thompson
Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
Malian:
The Epic of Sundiata
Senegalese:
Poetry of Senghor
Native American:
The Inconvenient Indian by Thomas King
Starlight by Richard Wagamese
Almanac of the Dead by L. Silko
Fools Crow by James Welch
Australian Aborigine:
Dark Emu by Bruce Pascoe
First Footprints by Scott Cane
My Place by Sally Morgan
American//Modern:
Real Life by Brandon Taylor
Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri
The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas
The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo
Internment by Samirâs Ahmed
Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurtson
Rivers of London Series by Ben Aaronovitch
The universe is really speaking to me and telling me to breathe life into the person I feel myself becoming, the changes I am undergoing, to put faith in this new layer of myself that is unfurling
Hereâs a 2020 edition of that coffee post â it seems that no matter what I am still all about iced coffee (with oat milk) when Iâm writing on hot summer daysÂ
itâs never too late to start again. 5pm on a thursday can be your new monday. you donât have to wait until the new year to better yourself. time is an illusion, donât forget that. just because you woke up at 1pm, it doesnât mean you messed your whole day up and that you canât turn the mood around. itâs never too late to start again!!!!!
my wife is constantly mocking me for how lightly done I like my toast. âyour hot bread is done,â she says to me. disgusting
*80s pop playing as I lay dead in the middle of the woods*
reblog this if youâre a university level studyblr
most of the ones i follow are high school level and i need more people my own age/education level!
dang Iâve sat here for hours. Itâs hot and Iâm holding off on doing things I should be. Sigh...
college gothic
someone in your class mentions communism. they speak about it at length. you are in biology class.
you text your mother. she does not respond for 3 days. you text her again and then realize that it has only been 2 hours since your first text.
freshmen travel in packs. what are they afraid of.
your class is in room 153. the numbers start at 201. you cannot find the first floor.
someone is talking about communism. it is not the same person as last time. this is an english class.
your transcript says you have an A in philosophy 3310. you do not remember taking this class. what did you learn? what did you do?
you meet your elevator buddy. you do not speak. you never do. you ride in silence. one day, they are not there. you miss them.
your advisor refers you to the registrar. the registrar refers you to admissions. admissions refers you to both the registrar and your advisor. you have spoken to two people who do not exist and one who has been dead for ten years.
the boy who sits next to you wears the same clothes everyday. you think this is strange but when you mention it, he tells you that this is the first time he has worn this outfit. you realize that you have lived this day before.
you pass someone sleeping in the quad. he has always been there. stop looking at him.
someone answers, âcommunism.â it is not someone who has been previously mentioned. the question was, âwhat is an example of the art of ancient greece?â
you have a doppelganger on campus. you have never met them. they know all of your friends.
the seniors speak only to professors. their eyes are dead. they have given up the safety of the pack long ago.
the professor is talking about STDâs. your math class is very strange.
the powerpoint is in comic sans. you suspect that your economics professor is an extraterrestrial being after all.
âcommunism,â the man serving you lunch insists. wearily you nod. thatâs what everyone says.
Is this not the average college experience?
read interesting books. listen to beautiful lyrics and melodies. write your own stories. go to concerts, parks and museums. study hard. take care of yourself. stay hydrated. learn to appreciate the little things. travel. learn a language. remind your friends that youâre there for them. be kind, and feel.
3:13 PM | books and perfume account for an embarrassing amount of my money
~listening to~ forest whitaker by bad books