back to college, back to chemistry
Here are some posts about cosmology, astrophysics and physics. I separated some of the main posts about space. Follow the list below ↓
Space-Time Fabric
What are Gravitational Waves?
What is Dark Energy?
What is Gravitational Lensing?
What are white holes?
Interacting galaxy
Quark epoch
Cosmic microwave background
The collision of two black holes holes
What is a Quasar?
What are Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs)?
What are Pulsars?
What is a Supernova?
What are white dwarfs?
What are brown dwarfs?
How did a solar eclipse prove the theory of relativity?
Black hole vs star
Millisecond Pulsar with Magnetic Field Structure
Some intriguing exoplanets
Cepheid star
UY Scuti
TRAPPIST-1 planets
Extremely Large Telescope (ELT)
Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART)
Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA)
Very Large Telescope (VLT)
What is the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA)?
ESO Telescopes Observe First Light from Gravitational Wave Source
Keck Observatory
Coronal mass ejection
Stars
Interesting facts about stars
Stellar parallax
Edwin Hubble
Interstellar asteroid Oumuamua
The most distant supermassive black hole ever observed
X-ray binary
Black holes
What is an Exoplanet?
Smith’s Cloud
Type Ia supernova
Protoplanetary disk
Magellanic Clouds
Herbig–Haro
Constellations
Solar system: Formation
Comets
Sunspot
Plasma Sun
Mercury
Venus
Mars
Ceres
Jupiter
Saturn
Uranus
Neptune
Pluto
67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
Zodiacal Light
Eclipse
Excitation of atom by photon
String Theory
Quantum Entanglement
Quantum Particles
What are the four fundamental forces of nature?
Nine weird facts about neutrinos
IceCube ( IceCube Neutrino Observatory)
What are Quarks?
Quantum Vacuum
Fermions and Bosons
30 years after the detection of SN1987A neutrinos
The Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO)
The Large Hadron Collider
Vampire squid
This Photo of a Single Trapped Atom Is Absolutely Breathtaking
Halo (optical phenomenon)
Dirty thunderstorm
Bioluminescent Plankton
Where Your Elements Came From
IG: astronomy_blog
My blog
I’m going to uni this autumn, and I feel like most of studyblr’s incoming freshmen are just as clueless as I am. Here’s a bunch of tips from the more experienced among us, and I hope it’s just as useful to you as it is to me!
this took forever to make so i’m really hoping it’s good
Textbooks
Sites where you can get free textbooks by @thearialligraphyproject
Get textbooks online
Tips for textbooks by @theorganizedcoyote
Websites to get cheap textbooks by @theorganisedstudent
Ultimate guide to buying college textbooks
Safe ways to get free textbooks
Saving Money
A girl called jack: eating under the line
Qriket
Scholarship masterpost by @wallcalendar
Save money while shopping online
College scholarships 2016-17 by @wonderstudying
Tips for finding & getting scholarships
How to budget
Where to find student discounts by @collegerefs
Searching for scholarships by @collegesmarts
Creative ways to save money in college
Places that offer discounts with student id
Ways to save/earn money
Paying for college by @collegerefs
Dorm & Living
PSA for college freshmen
Dorm tips from @humanitaes
Ultimate school locker (uni bag) kit by @girl-studying
Resolving issues with roommates
Tips for living like an adult
How to eat healthy in dining halls
DIY dorm decor by @notquitenightingale
Everything I actually used in my freshman dorm room
Guide to living alone by @piratestudy
Living with a roommate by @collegerefs
Packing Lists
Thing I forgot to bring to college by @myberkeleyadventure
Sam’s ultimate failproof guide to packing by @staticsandstationery
Ultimate college packing list for freshmen
College packing list by @kimberlystudies
What to bring to college
Checklist for dorms & campus living
Packing up: preparing for college in @theacademiczine
College dorm packing list by @produitivity
Recipes
One-pot chicken fajita pasta
100 dirt cheap recipes for students
57 go-to recipes for college students
Cheap & healthy recipes
Over 400 fast & healthy recipes
Studying & Taking Notes
Organizing notes with Google Docs by @academla
How to write a lecture summary efficiently by @collegerefs
Symbols & abbreviations for note-taking
How to take lecture notes by @hstrystdyblr
How to take notes in college by @determinationandcaffeine
Getting the most out of lecture by @strive-for-da-best
How to get your best grades in college by @saralearnswell
If you have a bad college professor
Essays
Transition words for essays by @soniastudyblr
How to analyze historical sources by @rewritign
How to write a university level essay by @healthyeyes
Analyzing a written text
Essay writing: university vs. high school
How to write a history paper by @thehistorygrad
How I plan and write literature papers by @notaperfectstudent
Exams
A quick guide to finals by @emmastudies
10 revision tips for final & first year exams
High school exams vs. college exams
Crucial study tips for finals week in college
3 day study plan by @getstudyblr
Low stress college study strategy by @plannerdy
Masterposts
A college student’s masterpost by @eruditekid
Random college tips by @determinationandcaffeine
College advice by @studenting
Giant college masterpost by @heyiwantyoutostay
Advice
Advice for college by @collegerefs
10 tips for starting uni by @studycubs
Advice from a college senior
Great tips from @fuckstudy
10 more excellent tips
Things nobody tells you about university by @polcry
Miscellaneous
8 things successful students do by @frankfurter-studies
Email tips by @haileymostudies
@collegerefs‘ entire blog– so much good stuff that’s incredibly useful
my grace.uni tag– all the posts I’ve saved for university
Staying in contact with high school friends
How to make friends in college
Hey guys, so I’m nearing the end of my senior year, and it’s been great so far! I accomplished my academic tasks efficiently and didn’t burn myself out, and I think the main contributor to my success as a student is my organization system. This system has been refined throughout my high school years, but I think now I’ve finally found the most effective methods.
Please remember that this isn’t the only organization system you can adopt; this is just the one that works the best for me, and I hope that by sharing it with you, you’ll gain a new perspective on how to stay organized as a high school student.
The first thing I wanna talk about is my notebook system, which I briefly mentioned in my Guide to Note-Taking.
My notebook system comprises three types of notebooks: the Everything Notebook, the subject notebook, and the revision notebook.
The first stage is in-class notes. I only bring one notebook to school every day. I call it my Everything Notebook, and this is where I write down all of the notes I take in class. This way, I don’t have to lug around six notebooks where I’m only going to use a few pages in each of them that day.
At the end of the day, I would revise my notes and compare them to the syllabus so I know where we are in the learning process. I would then transfer my class notes from my Everything Notebook to my different subject notebooks. This is stage two. I also start to jazz up my notes because I use the notes in my subject notebooks to study for tests.
In addition to my class notes, I include material from my teachers’ notes that they might not have elaborated on, as well as points in the syllabus (I’m currently taking A2) that were only glazed over briefly, or not at all, in some cases. (Note: this does not mean they completely skip a chapter or topic; it’s more like they missed a few bullet points that should be in my notes but aren’t. An example would be if we’re learning about phenol reactions and the teacher forgot to mention the use of FeCl3 as a test for phenol.)
Stage three comes a little later, when exam week is just around the corner. Essentially, I rewrite and improve my notes from my five different subject notebooks into a single revision notebook or binder. (Recently, I’ve opted for a revision notebook because they’re lighter and easier to carry around.)
Because my teachers don’t always teach in the order of the syllabus, the first thing I do is organize my notes according to the syllabus. I would then fill in any other missing gaps in the material that hadn’t been filled in stage two.
When compiling material for my revision notebook, I use as many sources as possible: my own notes, my teachers’ notes, youtube videos, online sites, and my favorite, the mark scheme! I add in some answers from past papers (explanations only, so no calculations) mainly to secure marks. It’s safer to memorize definitions straight from the mark scheme than from the textbook or from handouts. I also do this to ease my memorization, especially for topics that require lengthy explanations. It’s a lot easier to remember the 6 points I need to explain the principles of NMRI than to remember everything in the four-page handout my teacher gave me.
Folders and binders are essential to organizing your papers. Some people keep a single accordion folder for all their papers, but for me it’s just too heavy to carry around all the time. The same goes for subject folders that are brought to school every day.
Instead, my binder/folder system comprises my Everything Folder and my subject binders.
The folder I carry with me to school every day is this A4 folder I got from Tokyu Hands. It has 5 pockets, one for each day of the week, so all the papers I receive on Monday will go behind the first divider, and so on.
Some people also keep blank papers in their folders; I don’t because my school has its own lined paper and graphing pads that I keep under my desk that I use if a teacher asks us to do an assignment on those papers. If I do work at home, I prefer to just use a plain A4 paper or a legal pad.
At the end of the week, I’ll sort my papers into my subject binders. Sometimes I’ll keep some papers in the folder if I think I’ll be needing it the next week. This usually only applies to worksheets because all my teachers’ notes are available on Google Classroom, so I can access them even if I don’t physically have them.
Each of these binders have sections inside them:
Physics: 1 for handouts, notes, and tests, 1 for Paper 4 (Theory), 1 for Paper 5 (Practical Planning). I included extra tabs to mark the different topics in the handouts section.
Chemistry: same as Physics.
Economics: 1 for Paper 3 (MCQ), 1 for Paper 4 (Case Study and Essay). A lot of my Economics material is online, though.
English: 1 for Paper 3 (Text and Discourse analysis), and 2 for Paper 4 (Language Topics, which includes 1 for Child Language Acquisition, 1 for World Englishes). Past papers, handouts, and notes all go under their respective topics.
Mathematics: I just keep everything together because I never revise math and just constantly do past papers.
This makes it easier for me to revise each subject because I can just take one binder with me instead of a messy folder with everything just shoved in there.
I keep a magazine file for each of my A-Level subjects (English and Mathematics are combined). All my textbooks, revision guides, and subject notebooks are kept here, so if I need to revise one subject, that’s the magazine file I’ll take out.
These magazine files prevent any small things (like my book of flashcards) from being shoved to the back of my bookshelf, or materials from different subjects from getting mixed up.
In my senior year, I mostly plan using this app called Edo Agenda. It syncs across all my devices for free and has all the features I need: a to do list to organize tasks, monthly and weekly calendars to organize events, a journal to organize notes and memos.
I used to bullet journal regularly, but it takes too much time during weekdays, so now I just bullet journal for the therapeutic effects it gives me, and I use an app for organizing tasks and events. Sometimes at the end of each week, I’ll transfer my tasks to my bullet journal and then decorate the page, but again, this is just for its therapy.
Organizing your school supplies is just as important as organizing your papers and notes. With a more organized backpack and pencil case, you won’t waste time looking for your things at the bottom of an abyss.
I don’t find it necessary to bring so much stationery to school unless I plan on making notes at school (usually during revision week).
Because we’re already in the revision term, I don’t really carry a lot of things in my everyday backpack, just the following:
Pencil case
Everything Notebook
Everything Folder
Revision notebook
Kindle
Phone
Wallet
Earphones
Calculator
Speaker
Drinking bottle
A pouch with things like a hairbrush, pads, and lip balm
And that’s all for now! I hope this post will help you organize your school life (if you haven’t already) or at least provide some useful insights on some ways to stay organized as a high school student.
100 days of productivity || day 2
In the progress of making notes for my Psychological Statistics exam. I don’t get this shit 😭😭
#studyblr #originalpost #studyspo #psychblr #100daysofproductivity
i was terrified of doing this in undergrad, and now that i’m asked to write them fairly often, i am fondly exasperated when my students don’t know how to ask for them. obviously there’s no single way, but here’s the way i usually do it.
(obviously ask in person if you can! but email is also fine.)
should be short & should mainly be asking whether they’re willing to write you the letter
should provide only the basics - what the professor absolutely needs to know.
the position you’re applying for
when the letter would be due
optional: if you’re afraid they won’t remember you, a quick line identifying yourself & your relation to them
i like to provide an “out,” in case they don’t want to or are unable to write the letter
SAMPLE Dear Professor X, I’m applying for a job as an English tutor at the University Student Resource Center, and was wondering if you’d be willing to write me a letter of recommendation for the position. [optional identification: I really enjoyed taking English 300 with you in Winter 2016, and I’m hoping to develop and pass on those skills to other students through this job.] The letter would be due by September 1st - I know you’re very busy, so I completely understand if you’re not able to write one. All best, Your Name
they said yes!! amazing.
this one can provide a little more information – a link to the job posting, if there is one, or you can write a quick summary of the position, plus a sentence or two about why you’re excited/interested in the job.
also tell them where to send the letter!!
directly to the recruiter for the job
to you, to add to your application packet
upload to an online LoR service or to an application website
99% of the time folks are fine with receiving electronic copies, but if they need to mail a hard copy, let them know up front.
SAMPLE: Dear Professor X, Thank you so much! I really appreciate it. Here’s the link to the job listing; the letter should be sent as a .pdf file to the email address at the bottom of the page, anytime before 9/1. Thanks again – I’m hoping that this job will provide me with some teaching experience and the opportunity to work on my own writing. Please let me know if you need any more information! Best, Your Name
these stress me out real bad but here’s the deal: most professors have a very shaky relationship to deadlines (especially when they have half a dozen more important ones than your piddly LoR).
the upshot: do not be afraid to nudge them.
often they need the nudge and are appreciative of it.
when that nudge happens is up to you and how much room you’ve given them before the deadline, and it’ll look different depending on your relationship with that professor.
i offered to send my professors essays that i had written for their classes, especially if i had taken those classes more than a year before asking them to write the letter, just so they could refamiliarize themselves with my work. you can also offer to send them your writing sample, if you haven’t already asked them to look it over for you.
honestly i’d recommend asking for these in person bc it’ll give you a chance to talk to them about their grad school experience and your own hopes & aspirations, which will help them write a more personal, fleshed-out letter.
one important note: if this letter is intended for use in grad school applications, do not stress out if it’s a little late. most programs do not care, and pretty much all of them accept late letters without a problem. your professor’s ability to meet deadlines does not reflect on you, and professors are intimately familiar with running late on LoRs. they really honestly don’t care. as long as it gets there before too long, you’ll be fine.
thank-yous are up to you! keep in mind that many departments have policies about gift-giving. i did give thank-yous to my three major letter writers, but they were handwritten cards & homemade cookies, nothing store-bought or expensive.
Where do you recommend getting textbooks from? (renting, buying, online etc)
well textbook companies are evil and sometimes you have no choice but to buy a textbook new, but for other times where that’s not the case i’d recommend you check out slugbooks! ^_^ they compare a bunch of different sites selling the textbook you need so you can find it at the cheapest price :) it’s like the kayak of academia lol!
1. You are very lucky and privileged to have access to almost unlimited knowledge and you should appreciate that. 2. Be one of those rare people who step over their insecurities and succeed. 3. Only 5 minutes. Only today. (Repeat it 5 minutes later and every day). 4. You will know what to do as soon as you start. Ideas never appear from inactivity. 5. Make yourself proud. 6. One hour every day doesn’t feel much but it’s 365 hours a year. You can’t not succeed after so much work. 7. It’s not supposed to be easy. Nothing good is easy. 8. If you had a child to look after, you’d make them study because you want them to accomplish something. Don’t you love yourself? 9. “Everything you want is on the other side of fear” George Adair 10. Every mistake increases our chance to make progress. 11. If you give up now, you’ll have to return to this later anyway but from the very beginning. 12. Let the process be your result. 13. Every moment you thought your fears would suppress you has become the time you made it. 14. Maybe you think you can never find something to use your skills and mindset for. But if you continue investing in what matters to you, it will find its way out there. 15. I allow you to think globally. You have a right to the boldest dream.
The Strange Persistence of First Languages by Julie Sedivy
My First Language by Bernardo Atxaga
Mother Tongue by Yoojin Grace Wuertz
The Ebbing Language: Living in Dutch and English by Sadiqa de Meijer
If language tells us who we are, then who am I? by Stan Grant
To Leave Your Mother Tongue is to Love It More by Ewa Hryniewicz-Yarbrough
The Dream of a Mother Tongue by Oumaima
a study blog for collected references, advice, and inspiration
267 posts