explore
noise dept.
YOU ARE THE REASON
đȘŒ
todays bird

oozey mess
Xuebing Du
Peter Solarz

JBB: An Artblog!
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

@theartofmadeline

No title available
No title available
occasionally subtle
i don't do bad sauce passes

ç„æ„ / Permanent Vacation
Mike Driver
One Nice Bug Per Day
tumblr dot com

shark vs the universe
Jules of Nature

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Australia

seen from United States
seen from Italy

seen from TĂŒrkiye
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Azerbaijan
seen from Malaysia
seen from Iraq
seen from Iraq

seen from Germany
seen from Switzerland
@whilestillimay
explore
Dwell
Sara Combs
Bryan Daugherty
I give you my new flat! Super exited and a little anxious to be back but moving in with my friends is going to make it so much better âš canât wait to decorate more and spruce up my little desk đ
So, recently I handed in my dissertation. This was the biggest piece of work that I have ever done. I wrote 10,000 words on the topic of womenâs friendship in the early modern period as presented in letters. And let me tell you, it was tough. Incredibly so. But it was manageable! And it can be for you too! If you plan to go into higher education, writing a dissertation, thesis, or project, is inevitable. So Iâm here to tell you how to plan and execute a huge piece of work. As my background is primarily History, this will be more about humanities than sciences. But I hope that I can help you out!
Choosing a topic:
Choose something you like. Because by the end of it, youâre going to be sick of it. And, trust me, itâs better to be sick of something youâre actually interested in.
Look at the stuff youâve done in the past and think about what you liked about each module. Gender? Politics? Semantics? The great thing about a dissertation is that you can explore which ever topic you feel like.
Research. Read everything you can on the topic. When you think youâve read enough, read some more. The more you research, the better idea youâll have as to whether your topic is viable. Google scholar is awesome, use it! And Jstor. And your university library. You have so much material at your fingertips, you just gotta find it.
Look at which sources are available to you. I stupidly chose a question which was very difficult to research. This was okay, as I was passionate about the topic and willing to travel to archives. But if you canât think of anything to write about, maybe see what primary material is available to you at your university/college.
Originality is key for a huge piece of work like this. This is the most difficult part of choosing a topic, in my opinion. Think of something that hasnât been done before, or come to a new conclusion. Trust yourself, your opinions are valid!
Primary sources are the most important thing here. Read them before you read too much secondary material. This way, you can find your own opinions on the subject without just appropriating what has been already said.
Talk to people who know what theyâre talking about. Your university pays lots of professors whose job it is to advise you. Go and talk to them! They may be able to give you some new perspective.
Planning your essay:
How do you eat an elephant?
One bite at a time.
This is the most important thing I can say to anyone planning a huge piece of work. If you do a little bit every week, then youâll be fine. You DO NOT want to find yourself a week from the deadline, with still 5,000 words to write. I know some people who did that, and they suffered. Badly. So keep plugging away at it, and youâll get it done in time. Here are a few tips which I learned the hard wayâŠ
Give yourself plenty of time to research. I spent 3 months just reading before I even thought about making a solid plan. Only after doing loads of reading and thinking can you come up with a way to tie together everything youâve learned.
When making a plan, decide how many words to devote to each âchapter.â This means you wonât go over the word limit. And editing is the worst.
I made quite a long detailed plan in order to structure my thoughts. That plan became my bible. It might not work for you though.
This is my favourite way of planning my essays. Itâs such a useful guide, so simple, and so helpful. Give it a look! Iâve been using a similar technique since I started uni, but this is better tbh.
When researching, PLEASE FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, write down where you found the information. Page numbers, author, publisher, date of publication, editions, chapter titles, chapter page numbers. I spent 4 days after I had written the whole thing just trying to find this one God damn article which I had read nearly a year ago. It was a nightmare.Please. Record the bibliographical information.
Write all the important dates in your diary/phone. I also used âmonthly remindersâ so I was constantly aware of how long I had left.
Give yourself a week to edit and create your bibliography. Itâs nice to edit at your own pace, not at a rush.
Give yourself lots of room for disasters! When I was planning my essay, I had no idea that I was going to break my arm, and be in cast for half of the year. I obviously did not predict that. But I had an adaptable schedule, which really helped me.
And make sure to regularly back everything up! I lost a load of work and it sucked so bad. Donât let that happen to you.
The Writing:
Give yourself your own deadlines. Say that you need to have written the first chapter three months before the deadline, or something like that. This means that you wonât be rushing at the end, and you might be able to give drafts of chapters to your supervisor to read over.
Itâs alright if you donât write perfectly on the first try. Splurge your ideasall over the paper! Freewrite everything you want to say. And then, after a cup of tea or a nap, come back to it. Youâll feel much better for it.
You donât have to start at the beginning. Maybe write the chapter that you have the most information for first, to give yourself some confidence. Or, maybe start with the worst first, to make the rest seem less daunting. Itâs up to you, both strategies have merit.
Daily word counts are great when youâre reaching the deadline. I knew I had to write 150 words every day in order to hit the deadline - I exceeded this every day, which made me feel awesome about myself and gave myself loads of confidence.
Talk to people about it! I find that talking about my opinions out loud really help me formulate my ideas in my head.
Do loads of proof reading. I discovered two days before the deadline that I had been spelling âamicitiaâ wrong consistently. It was pretty embarrassing.
Ask your friends/family to read it through. Even if they donât  understand everything, they should be able to help with grammatical errors and such like. When youâre sick of reading your own words (which is very quickly for me) youâll be thankful for the second opinion.
TRUST YOURSELF AND YOUR ABILITY, YOU CAN DO IT.
30 Day Challenge // Day Twenty-Seven
Whereas last week was distracted by a trip to Italy, this week has been occupied by an internship and therefore pretty busy. So Iâve taken to waking up about 5:30 every morning so that I have time to research or write or whatever else needs to be done before work.
This morning was catching up on the productivity log and writing letters. And itâs been above 70 degrees the past two days, so out come the flowers.
30 Day Challenge // Day Twenty-Six
Fell off the map for about a week there, because as a spontaneous graduation trip I went and spent four days in Italy, exploring the cities of Turin and Milan.Â
It was an incredible time just walking around, seeing new things, drinking good wine and coffee, reading for something other than research, and only thinking once or twice about the impending dissertation.
The log of this challenge is a little off now, but oh well; itâs done what it needed to do, so weâll finish strong.
âSt Agnesâs eve, ah bitter chill it was!â Keats notes; I love revising literature but history always gets in the way.
Watching success of others is inspirational, but realising your own ability to succeed is life-changing.
30 Days of Productivity // Days Seventeen & Eighteen
It was a wild weekend in all the best ways, and a great way to top off an incredibly productive week. But there was a lack of pictures taken, so hereâs a view from an old classroom in Covent Garden.
Onto Monday~
30 Days of Productivity // Day Sixteen
Term papers are done! This bookshop study spot find gave me new life this week (itâs the little things).
On to preparing for the Dissertation Proposal, which is in less than four weeks!
30 Days of Productivity // Day Fifteen
Appropriate that at the halfway mark of this challenge, it was the loveliest day in London yet this year. I woke up early, did some readings, spent the afternoon wandering southbank with a friend, then got to throw open the windows and enjoy the setting sun while I cooked dinner.