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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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6:43pm: friday nights @ coffee shops are my fave!!! i have been reading to the lighthouse by virginia woolf and i adore/despise stream-of-consciousness writing (mostly adore). this is for an essay comparing this book to madame bovary by flaubert and one of the questions i just thought of that i want to explore is how woolf (a female) portrays male attitudes towards women / how flaubert (a male) portrays female attitudes towards men. i don’t know i am just throwing around ideas at the moment but i know this essay is going to be v feminist and my ap lit teacher told me to talk about how both authors explore the concept of motherhood so that’s exciting. this has been an update.
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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10 Day Study Challenge // Day 2 
"teach us a concept you’ve learnt this month that you find interesting"
We’ve just finished studying states of consciousness and sleep in psychology and something I found interesting was the idea of the “sleep-wake cycle shift during adolescence”. 
This is concept explains why at the beginning of adolescence the amount of sleep drops from 10 hours per night on average to about 7-8 even though us adolescents require about 9 hours of sleep a night. This is the result of a hormonally induced shift of our body clock or by about 1-2 hours resulting in the adolescent experiencing sleepiness 1-2 hours later. 
The text book I use for psychology also said that “up to 50% of Australian adolescents may be affected by a sleep problem” (Gradisar. 2009). This really interested me as it made me wonder how this problem could be solved.
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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20/1/15 So this is what i did last year. I wrote down all the test and due dates. And I evaluated my day by colour codes
Green: I had a very very productive day and studied a lot! Red: NOT a very productive day 
By doing this everyday, I was compelled to look at the year plan regularly and aware of how much time i had left to study.
So my little tip for time management is to look at the big picture! And of course i’mma use this again this year! 😀
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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3:26 // feb 18, wed
Annotations whilst waiting for the bus home
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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FOR THE ANON WHO ASKED FOR MY DEMAND AND SUPPLY ELASTICITY NOTES
The sticky notes are definitions Blue and underline are section titles Equations in green and other important things hopefully stand out
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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found classics society minutes from 1968 which are pretty neat and make me want a typewriter even more 📓 (at King’s College London)
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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Huck Finn essay planning - day 2. I sent my thesis statement to my professor but I’m still getting used to my iPhone’s tiny touchscreen and I accidentally sent it before I finished writing my email. Then followed up with an awkward amendment email. Sigh. #college.
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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// I need this on my ceiling. 
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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Some progress is better than no progress.
 attackonstudying
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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Self control and discipline aren't things that can be learned through tumblr posts or self-help books.
The only way to nail it, is to put your phone down, take out your books, and force yourself through everything you don’t want to do.
Then you have to dedicate yourself by sticking with this regime hour after hour, day after day, month after month, until you finally reach excellence.
That’s the only way. There are no short cuts.
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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You need to understand that studying requires extensive training. Study habits, amount of sleep, timing. Therefore, you should see it as a sport. In order to get better, you need to repeat and practise.
college-girl-confessions
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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As soon as you think “maybe I can get up early and just finish it tomorrow” you’ve already lost.
Smile:  
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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Get your head in the game and eliminate stress. A noisy and fretting mind will not have any space for learning. Here are some remedies for that.
1. Schedule before anything else. Two simple things to keep in mind: Overestimate and be flexible. Put in extra hours for hard topics, and keep rescheduling throughout the day as much as needed. This is an instant band aid for anxiety.
Pro Tip: Using a digital planner allows quick and easy rescheduling.
2. Equip a Growth Mindset Your intelligence, skills and “talents” are not fixed attributes. All of those are malleable. If you want to get better at anything, train on it. Commit to progress and growth not perfectionism. There is no such thing as naturally smart, there are only people who put in the time and effort to learn and master things, and anyone can do that. If people get good grades, it does not mean that they are intellectually superior, it means that they put in the work for it.
Pro Tip: Pressuring yourself to study faster by putting in time limits for each page or material is counterproductive. You’ll end up super anxious and disappointed. Screw time pressure and learn at your own comfortable pace.
Real Talk: If you feel like the work load is too hard, the anxiety is piling, everything feels impossible, and you just wanna sit there to cry and accept defeat- Grow up! Everyone is going through something hard. The difference between people who succeed and those who don’t is that those who succeed aren’t pussies. Stop crying, get up, take responsibility for your life and get to work! If you fail it’s not because of lack of time, or a mental illness, it’s because you didn’t work hard.
3. Have Good Study Ethics Personal issues don’t mix with studies. Keep it professional and commit to focusing your thoughts on studying when it’s study time. 
Have a winning attitude: I’m not gonna stop until I’m done!
4. Prep Yourself  Start early. Get up between 5 AM - 9 AM. You only get this day and moment once. Make it count. If you’re exhausted, don’t beat yourself up. Rest completely, and start early tomorrow. Always study way ahead, and break the material in several chunks if possible. 
Pro Tip: You don’t need more time, you need more effort. Get things done early, it reduces a lot of stress and gives you more free time for fun.
Gather all materials. Choose reference materials that you easily understand. Complicated text books are pointless if you can’t comprehend it. Keep your pens and markers in one container near you. Keep a dictionary and Google nearby.
Pick a good study spot. Pick a room with windows that you can fling open so fresh air and natural light can get in, also with lots of free open space so you can pace around.
Get your Dopamine up. It’s a shame not to use the body’s natural motivator after all. Pump it up by dancing, singing, or eating some sweets before studying.Throw yourself into studying with high energy.
Pro Tip: Don’t start on the bed especially when you’re unmotivated and drowsy. 
5. Shut up and Start Start studying when you plan to start studying. No excuses. You’re never going to feel ready and refreshed to study especially in the beginning. Feeling naturally and infinitely motivated to study is a myth. Studying is more of momentum that you build up gradually, until you just can’t stop. 
It will always be rough when you begin.
Pro Tip: Count 1, 2, 3 then start
6. Use the Pomodoro Technique 25 minutes studying followed by a 5 minute break, 15-30 minute breaks every 4 Pomodoros. Obey the time rules. The break is there to help your mind retain more. Remember, the next Pomodoro will be better.
Pro Tip: Break time is for you to wind down. Close your eyes and rest, eat or meditate. Don’t use gadgets or make calls. It’s called rest time, not stay-alert-for-useless-activities time.
7. No Bull Shit Studying 
Start where it’s easy for you. You don’t have to start in the first page, nor do you have to study in a chronological order. Jump through topics. If you’re stuck move to another topic and work backwards.
Pro Tip: Sacrifice and prioritize. Don’t accept invitations to any leisure activity if you know it’s study time soon.
Be a creative problem solver. Find a better, easier way to learn the material. Experiment and research ways to better understand the topic. Watch videos, use memory aids, explain the lesson in your own words or in a different language. Make funny, and exaggerate mnemonics.
Just Study. Study hard or study gently, whichever you can. Focus on progress. Forget how much more you need to learn and focus on learning. 
Pro Tip: Studying time is for studying ONLY. Not studying and chatting or watching TV or playing games. Focus.
Pep Talk: Don’t give up. Keep going. If you give up, then you’ve sealed your failure. Passing or failing is a 50/50 chance, but if you keep studying, you increase your odds of passing.
Rewiring Failure: Failure is simply an opportunity to start over, more intelligently this time. True failure is sitting there, feeling bad about yourself, and not trying again at all.
Triage ruthlessly. Study what’s necessary and skip unnecessary information. Don’t memorize everything. Study hard and smart.
Repeat Repeat Repeat. If you forget something, don’t punish yourself. Be kind to yourself and REINFORCE. Relearn it. Not being able to recall something is only a cue for you to put in more time. Repeat it until you get it. Go slow; Don’t rush. Keep at it until you get it. Go as slow as you need.
Review everything again once you cover the entire topic. Focus on Waterloos.You’re done when you can explain everything in your own words, and you can jump through any topic without getting a mental block.   
Pro Tip: Sleepy? Get up and move around while you study or read it out loud. You’re only sleepy in the beginning. It gets better 
8. Push Yourself Studying is mostly grit beyond this point. Studying is 99% effort and hard work; 1% technique. In the end, it’s the persistent student that will learn the material most.
Relax. Don’t Panic. Don’t rush learning, go at a comfortable pace, and take as long as you need with each material. Be patient with yourself, and it will reward you with quick recall ability.
Pep Talk: You dictate your limitations, your body doesn’t. If the mind doesn’t want to give up, the body has no choice but to obey.
9. Create Relevant Study Guides
Flashcards are extremely useful for formulas, normal values, and terms that require rote memorization.
Summaries are generally useful for textbooks, and detailed information or notes. Use as few words as possible.
Practice Exams are extremely useful to assess mastery of the information.
10. Get Support Have someone who encourages you to keep going, gives you hope, and occasionally gives you shit if you’re screwing around. Some times all it takes is the right person to tell us to stop fucking around, or to tell us that they believe in us to keep us going.
Pro Tip: Don’t sit around yapping about your worries forever. No one is going to fix your life for you. Get your shit together. Whether we succeed or not is completely our responsibility.
11. Pull an All Nighter However, this is only a last resort. Think about this: A well rested mind with nothing to recall is far worse than a drowsy mind that is full of information just waiting to be recalled.
Pro Tip: You are not gonna die from an all nighter. Just remember to nap every once in a while, and catch up on sleep ASAP.
"You can never defeat a person that doesn’t know how to give up." Studying-Queen
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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@ firstyearrepeat, indeed it is! I find that the spiral bound diaries are easier to use compared to the case bound ones because 1. they can lie flat; 2. I'm a leftie but many other lefties that I know disagree with me on this *shrugs*; 3. you can fold it back without worrying about damaging the spine of your diary and 4. you get to reuse the cover in the future, whether it's a Cumberland or not.
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24th Feb. 2015, 17:18
Priorities.
Tackling the most important and urgent tasks. I’ve set myself four achievable tasks for this evening and will reassess my list afterwards. I have a separate list of of the actual schedule, with the allocated times set for each task. Each task is also broken down into smaller parts because little steps; make progress.
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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Hi! Firstly, congratulations on your ATAR and your placement at Cambridge! I was just wondering what was your week and weekend study routine. Thanks!
Hey!! Thank you :D Okay well during my HSC year my week looked like this around my trials (which was the most intense period of time for me).
Monday: lunchtime - study/make notes, afternoon - study/make notes/do assignments from 4 until 7, take an hour and break over dinner and then study until 10.
Tuesday - Get up at 6 or 7 (I would sometimes would work, but I’m an early riser anyway), lunchtime - study/make notes, afternoon - study/make notes/do assignments from 4 until 5, go to athletic training, come home at 7, take a break, study for an hour 9 to 10pm
Wednesday: Get up at 6 or 7, lunchtime - study/make notes, afternoon - study/make notes/do assignments from 4 until 7, take an hour and break over dinner and then study until 10.
Thursday: Get up at 6 or 7, lunchtime - study/make notes, afternoon - study/make notes/do assignments from 4 until 5, go to athletic training, come home at 7, take a break, study for an hour 9 to 10pm
Friday: Get up at 6 or 7, lunchtime - study/make notes, afternoon - take the whole afternoon off yewww
Saturday: morning - I would sometimes go to athletics training throughout the year, but around the time of my exams I stopped doing this, rest of the day was just studying.
Sunday: Same as Saturday.
So yeaaah I was kinda always working, but I made time for breaks and also made sure I took time off on Friday and Saturday sometimes too. It’s all about prioritising certain things in your schedule! Plus this wasn’t my typical week the whole year, only towards the intense end part of the HSC (plus I had heaps of extra study I needed to do for the cambridge application) 
Hope this helps!
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studyhardtrainhard · 9 years
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Ok so a lot of people ask me how I got good grades at A level, so this is my post for revision tips!
Bear in mind I did biology, chemistry and maths so these tips are probably more relevant to sciency subjects, but some can be applied across all subjects!
Notes. It’s good to be very diligent...
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