Tag Archives: school

Plan of Action, lets try this again

Part 1: Today’s Task

Okay, so here’s the deal, if I actually finish the quite simple task of studying for my philosophy exam, aside from the summary of the court case in mindscan by 10:30 then I give myself permission to start (although probably not finish) one of the projects on my craft list, which may or may not be shared with tumblr depending on the Christmas related secrecy of chosen project.

Part 2: Sleep and Exercise

If I go to sleep earlier then, or around 12:30 and get up before 9:30 I give myself permission to play wii for half an hour after breakfast. Although this may have to be adjusted due to Adam being back.

Part 3: Tomorrow’s Tasks

Before lunch, start and ideally complete another chapter of physics. Try to find a more, how do I say this, um QUICK, way of reviewing the textbook.

After lunch, start reviewing the first half of calculus before that exam sneaks up on me.

After arriving back in Waterloo, write a summary of the court preceding in mindscan and practice my amino acids (Don’t forget my flash cards ever again!)

Hopefully more than this will be completed, but even doing this amount will hopefully make me believe I will be able to adequately prepare myself for exams.

Part 4: Exam Protocol

Sleep by midnight, up by nine. My exam isn’t until 11, so review the prep I did for philosophy, eat breakfast etc. in between then and the exam. Also be prepared to go to the bank afterwards in order to get some bank related tasks out of the way. After the exam/bank I will reward myself with bubble tea. and possibly Chocolate. mmmmm.

That’s about as far ahead as I can think, but the basic outline for the rest of midterms is:

Study Calc and BioChem

Take Calc Exam

Study BioChem

Take BioChem Exam

Study Materials and PHYSICS

Take Materials Exam

Study Physics

Take Physics Exam

*Note* The spacing between exams is not even, thus the clumping of subjects

Somewhere in there I’ll have to pack and move my stuff, get a book for the plane, read a bit of the book mom got for me, but you know, that’s the gist.

This would be easier if the internet wasn’t so fun.

mildlyannoyedrabbit:

Have you ever been set free? I was recently. For more than a year I’ve been wrought up, tortured by things that are beyond my control. If I want to get down to brass tacks, I would say that I’ve been under an existential thumb for several years. I know – it all sounds so vague and maybe even ominous. It’s not. I just want to mark this occasion but I don’t want to dredge up the details. I am free because they no longer matter.

Also, I don’t know why I picked this picture. There is something in his expression that spoke to me. Ok, October 2011, it’s a whole new ball game or whatever metaphor does the trick.

I adore mildlyannoyedrabbit ever since Dana showed me.

Feeling pretty good tonight. I think calc tomorrow will go okay. At least, I feel more prepared then I have for the last three calc exams I’ve taken. Good enough, to sleep for eight hours, and just do some assignment questions, finish the practice midterm tomorrow. I got through all the examples in my notes, mostly by myself! I even wrote my little summaries. 🙂

Thinking about the future a lot lately

What do I want to do?

I’m quite happy in my program, Nanotechnology Engineering.

I like teaching people stuff.

I like being around people.

I like making discoveries.

I like making art, and writing, and crafts in general.

I like working with other people, and social justice, and contributing.

I want to make a difference.

I don’t want to be isolated.

I think superconductivity is super cool.

I like the ideas of integrating different fields.

I like innovation and entrepreneurship.

So many paths. So many choices.

What I’ve learned about taking notes

I remember being worried that I would have to take notes directly from teachers talking once I got to university. However, this very well may be because I’m in engineering, but I still haven’t encountered a teacher who doesn’t use some sort of visual aid. I have encountered teacher’s with messy writing, who go through slides to fast, who are hard to understand, and who organize information differently than me, which all pose there own challenges. I’ve learned a couple things about note taking by trial and error. Here they are:

First of all general comments:

  1. The goal of taking notes is to learn material. So people with near perfect memory, who pick up concepts immediately, and then are able to apply them flawlessly when it comes to assignment and tests don’t really need to take them. I mean, their class may kill them in that case, but academically speaking they don’t need to take them.
  2. Regardless of the fat that we’re not all geniuses, notes should still help the note taker understand and remember class material, so people with different learning styles notes should look different
  3. As easy as it is to just write without thinking about your writing, that partially defeats the purpose of note taking. However, if that’s your style that’s cool, but you should be making use of your notes in some other way in that case. Like reading them repetitively, reviewing examples, creating cheat sheets, or summarizing.
  4. When I first got to university I was shown a model of note taking where new variable and terms are defined in the margin and the main learning objectives, key points of the page were summarized in the bottom. This probably works great for lots of people, but I tried it last semester and it didn’t work great for me. What did end up working was highlighting titles of sections in one colour, and important information in another, and then on loose leaf writing a summary of information I need to memorize, key points and important formulas that I add to after every class. When I do assignments I tend to use these summaries instead of wading through notebooks. In addition rewriting stuff while actively sorting through what I know and don’t know and need to practice is a good way of studying. I usually go through the examples in my notes again as I do this as well, to make sure I understand everything. I also only do this for the classes I find it useful.
  5. Write down what the teacher says. Usually teachers will have power point slides, or will write on the chalkboard/whiteboard, and as important as that information is it’s usually more readily available from other sources such as your textbook, course notes, and the internet, then the things your teacher actually says.
  6. Make cheat sheets before exams even if you’re not allowed in order to recognize and target the important points of the course, and then memorize the information you would like to bring to the text with you (If you aren’t allowed a cheat sheet). If you aren’t allowed a cheat sheet you may not want to try and fit all the information on a single page, then again, maybe you will. I don’t know.
  7. Personally I really really like taking the notes for a single subject in a single  notebook. That way everything is in order and you cant lose pages. Downside is if you forget the book then you have to write on other paper and put that in a binder and not forget about those additional notes (although now when that happens I just paperclip them in to my notebook and that seems to work fine – problem solved!) I then keep all my assignments and such in a binder with a section for each subject. This works really well for me and everything stays well organized. You could try it too if you like.

Quick Tips:

  • Listen for the words “Exam” as in “I put this question on an exam once”, “I would make this question harder on an exam by”,”Remember ___ for your exam” and write down any other words in the vincinity
  • Review your notes one way or another
  • If you’re a visual learner try using coloured pens for note taking, use different colours for the bulk of your notes, examples, definitions, and any other key points
  • Highlight stuff, a lot, but not everything, with multiple colours
  • Use multiple colours of highlighters
  • Review periodically, not just right before the exam
  • It doesn’t really matter if your notes are neat or not, but you do need to be able to read them, so if you can only read neat writing THEN they should be neat, also it’s just nicer in general to read neat writing
  • Bullet points and numbered lists are fun! Include them in your notes in addition to in your late night tumblr posts!
  • If a prof says something that clarifies a point in a lecture, write THAT down IMMEDIATELY, you may forget at some point, and that point may be able to make things click again. Voila!
  • Reword stuff, the effort will help you remember it
  • Write down examples
  • If a teacher goes to fast in class either leave room to fill in notes with course notes/slides (if provided), print out power point slides ahead and bring to class (once again if provided), or summarize and write down the most important things first
  • Use bookmark stickynotes to tag pages with summaries, important formulas or other especially useful information so that they’re easy to find whenever you need them
  • Always either get notes from a friend or from the internet (if the prof uses ACE or another system to share files with the class and is in a habit of posting his or her notes) when you miss class, also actually look at those notes
  • Underline headings
  • Don’t use a computer to take notes for science and math classes unless you a) have a tablet, b) have a bamboo, c) are a boss (due to the fact that these classes have a ton of calculations, formulas, diagrams, Greek…)
  • Write prof quotes in your margins. Why? Because it will make you happier about life, and give you something funny to post on the internet (Warning: you may get sad when/if you no longer have an abundance of funny profs in a future semester)
  • Leave lines blank, allowing for white space makes things immensely easier to read (paper is cheap compared to your education)
  • Regardless of how important visual learning is in your overall learning character, have a coloured pen around to write down important stuff, or to mark up prof notes with answers to questions, notation, and the various other things they like leaving out so you actually have to attend class
  • Go to bed on time. How is this relevant you may ask? I am up writing this and it is late and I should be summarizing notes and copying math notes and sleeping, but I was just struck by how much I’ve learned about note taking since the beginning of this year and wanted to share it with the lovely internets. Goodnight.

P.S. It IS late, so excuse me if I didn’t edit this thoroughly. Also, I realized I used ‘teachers’ instead of ‘profs’ pretty much the whole way through. I am too lazy to go back and make the replacements, but I figure that you can do that in your head.