thecosmicstudyblr - The Cosmic Studyblr
The Cosmic Studyblr

24 * Virgo * I/O Psychology Ph.D. Student * Studyblr 

334 posts

Managed To Work On My Performance Management Project For 2.5 Hours Today; Considering That I Also Had

Managed To Work On My Performance Management Project For 2.5 Hours Today; Considering That I Also Had
Managed To Work On My Performance Management Project For 2.5 Hours Today; Considering That I Also Had

Managed to work on my performance management project for 2.5 hours today; considering that I also had to go to work for 7 hours, I consider this a pretty productive day!

In other news, it was an absolutely beautiful day out! I'm glad I took the time to walk back to my dorm instead of take the shuttle.

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More Posts from Thecosmicstudyblr

6 years ago

What are your top 5 study tips?

Helloo!

These answers are slightly obscure (but they’re good!):

Have a bedside table and a lamp (with dimming settings). There’s casual ways to keep studying. This is one of them. 

I get in bed about 30/40minutes before I want to sleep. I put my phone on silent (and it’s out of reach). Then I sit up in bed and read (the dim lamp helps me doze off and I can just reach over and turn it off when I’m done, instead of getting out of bed). 

The bedside table gives me easy access to my current reads!

Buy a clipboard: print off the journal articles you need to read for tomorrow’s lecture and sit up in bed annotating them. Then turn the lamp off and sleep.

Keep your favourite snacks with you when studying:

To stop me from getting up and wondering around (aka scavenging for food) I keep treats near my desk (I like apples, sweets and water).

Make lists: not a list for the week, or the day but for the specific study session. Write down what you want to achieve in the next 2/3hours and do it! 

Use sticky tabs in your books:

But always write on sticky tabs! Don’t just stick them in, always scribble something. Why did you put it there? You will forget if you don’t write it down. 

I hope these are helpful. 


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6 years ago
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Is there a skill you’ve always wanted to master someday, but kept procrastinating on? A language you started learning – then abandoned? A topic in class you’ve never quite grasped? Or maybe you just want to expand your horizon and try something new? Distract yourself from your usual studies?

This challenge is the perfect opportunity to achieve that! Pick a skill and see how much you can improve and grow in 30 days – or really start working on your to-read list (I know those books have been piling up), your portfolio for that dream job in Illustration you want, or your blog you’ve been meaning to post more original content on.

Self-growth and development are so, so important, which is the main reason why I created this challenge.

The idea of this challenge is that people from all communities come together to gain knowledge, add skills and just have fun with the amazing amount of resources out there. This way, we can all support and motivate each other, whatever field you might be interested in.

Post an introduction with the hashtag #30dol with your goals and expectations for the month (starting June 1st), and what your current level is. (Of course, you can join in later as well, but it’s fun to start a the same time!) In the end, you’ll be able to compare and see how much has changed!

Rules:

choose a topic or field you want to concentrate on

post an introduction to #30dol 

define your goals or aspirations

update daily or weekly, we want to hear from you! ♥

post a picture, a sketch, or audio, whatever you deem fitting to show us all your progress for the day/week

Here are some ideas for you:

bullet journaling (read about it here on @emmastudies, here’s an amazing online course on it) 

books/reading (if you don’t have a personal to-read list, here is one with the best books of the 20th century, best series with a gay plot/subplot, and books everyone should have read at least once)

coding (here are some sites to learn html, css, data science, python 3, java, etc.: x x x x)

design/illustration ( stickers and illustration, character illustration, Ink Illustration, 45 best adobe illustrator tutorials, 

business/freelance/open your own shop (tips on how to open your own sticker shop, digital skills: web analytics and marketing)

languages (apps like lingodeer, duolingo, lingvist, busuu, blogs like @lovelybluepanda. there are also so many pdfs and amazing websites out there depending on your target language!)

online mass education courses (edx, coursera, skillshare, futurelearn where universities and professionals teach you about their subject - be that astronomy, engineering, ancient greek history, artificial intelligence or medicine!)

social media (learn to take iphone photos for your tumblr or instagram, and here’s a great post by @studyquill on how to start and maintain a studyblr!)

photography (travel street photography, find photographers you admire like annie leibovitz or henri cartier bresson and read about their path, or browse youtube channels like negative feedback which specialize on photography)

creative writing (there are tons of workshops online - you could also try to set yourself a piece or word limit similar to nanowrimo) 

culinary (check recipe websites, or challenge yourself to try one new recipe a day, or dedicate the month to a specific cuisine)

music (learn music production, andrew huang has also made a video on how to start making music here)

film and filmmaking (karsten runquist’s channel is wonderful for film analysis,  learn about cinematography basics here and film history here)

painting (acrylic painting, sketchbook illustration. you could challenge yourself to fill an entire sketchbook/create a piece every day or week, or to improve a specific technique) 

Every resource linked is free (if you click on the links you can get Skillshare for free for two months and cancel anytime), so all you need is some free time and lots of motivation!!

I’m very happy to be announcing this to you all, and will be working on my Japanese for this challenge – so excited to see what you all and I will do and how far we can come!

Use #30dol as the general tag, and add your field (your specific subject, or writing, painting, lang(uages), pho(tography), film, book, design) to find people doing something similar! Though honestly one of the things I’m most excited about is the multidisciplinary aspect - we are such a brilliant and colorful community :)

Have fun guys!!


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6 years ago

THE ULTIMATE KOREAN LANGUAGE MASTERPOST

 [ warning! long post ] 

ok, so some of you remember my previous masterpost of Korean learning materials, but I’ve found even more learning materials so now I’m going to shower you all with knowledge and pdf files. (i thought i’d make a new post so it’s all in one place now)

[ textbooks & pdfs ] – all audio files are .rar files unless stated otherwise

My Korean – Book One [ audio files ] 

My Korean – Book Two [ audio files ] 

Dirty Korean

Using Korean

Basic Korean

Korean from Zero! – Book One

Korean Grammar for International Learners

Using Korean

Intermediate College Korean

Living Language Korean Course [ audio files ] 

Continuing Korean [ audio files ] 

Handbook of Korean Vocabulary 

Korean Grammar in Use

Korean for Dummies [ audio files ] [ cheat sheet ] 

Korean Made Simple (not a download)

Routledge Grammar – Basic Korean – A Grammar + Workbook  [ source two ] [ source three ] 

Routledge Grammar – Intermediate Korean – a Grammar + Workbook

Colloquial Korean – the Complete Course for Beginners [ audio files ] 

Essential Korean 

Pathfinder in Korean – Beginning Student Book [ workbook ] 

The Sounds of Korean – a Pronunciation Guide [ audio files ] 

Korean Word Book

My First Book of Korean Words

College Korean [ second source ] 

Elementary Korean

Hippocrene Beginner’s Korean [ second source ] [ audio files ] 

Korean Through English – Book One [ second source ] [ audio files ] 

Modern Conversational Korean

Korean: A Complete Course for Beginners

Step by Step Korean 

Beginner TOPIK Grammar & Vocabulary

Intermediate TOPIK Grammar

TOPIK Elementary Adjectives 

TOPIK Elementary Grammar

TOPIK Elementary Nouns 

TOPIK Intermediate Adjectives

TOPIK Intermediate Grammar 

TOPIK Intermediate Nouns

TOPIK Intermediate Verbs 

TOPIK listening files (mp3)

Making Out in Korean [ second source ]

Integrated Korean [ audio files ] 

Teach Yourself Korean [ audio files ] 

Korean Level 1 – Seoul National University

Korean Level 2 – Seoul National University

Korean Level 4 – Seoul National University

Korean Advanced Course Volume II  

Active Korean [ audio files ] 

Hanyang Korean 1 [ grammar and patterns ] [ writing practice ] 

Frequently Used Korean Dialogue 2000 Sentences 

Korean Language Structure, Use and Context 

Tense and Aspect in Korean 

Korean Honorifics and Politeness  

Easy to Learn Korean Language 

In Flight Korean [ audio files ] [ second source ] [ third source ] 

[ online resources ] 

how to study korean

Sogang Korean Program

learn korean

talk to me in korean

lets learn korean

free korean lessons

korean class 101

korean class 101 [ youtube ] 

talk to me in korean [ youtube ]  

sweetandtasty [ youtube ] 

seemile [ youtube ] 

common vocabulary

useful korean phrases

grammar + vocab reference

vocab games

quizlet

learn to read korean in 15 minutes

TOPIK guide

Easy Korean

flashcards

Dom & Hyo

grammar masterpost 

particles masterpost

Naver – english/korean dictionary

an ask that explains how to learn Korean

how to tell the time in Korean

alphabet practice

click Korean

quick korean

Apps: [ some may only be available for iphone or android and not both so bear with me ]

pop-popping korean (iOS + android)

tengugo hangul (iOS + android)

kdrama talk (iOS only)

Neme Korean (iOS + android)

KORLINK by Talk to Me in Korean (iOS + android)

Learn Korean by Bravo Language (iOS + android)

Korean Flashcards (free on android only, $4.99 oniOS)

Learn Korean 6000 words (android only)

TOPIK One (iOS + android)

Dongsa (iOS + android)

POPYA animals & fruits + vegetables (iOS + android)

HelloTalk (iOS + android)

misc. resources:

korean keyboard

culture notes

text slang

crash course on honorifics

children’s books

the chosun (news in korean)

korean class 101 podcast

talk to me in korean podcast

blogs: [ most of these seem pretty active as far as i can tell ]

unyounglearnskorean

study-korean

translating korean

letstteok-korean

onestopkorean

learnkoreanwithmusic

hangeulit

learninghangukeo

way-to-fluency

snubiwriteskorean

easykorean

cassarilla

teachmykorean

I WILL BE ADDING TO THIS IF I FIND MORE STUFF BUT UNTIL NOW HERE IS EVERYTHING I WAS ABLE TO FIND!!


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6 years ago

How should I study?

This is probably the most asked question. And I will be totally honest now and give you some advice on how you should and how you shouldn’t study.

The ideal way of self studying a language

doesn’t exist. Or at least I haven’t found it. But there is no method which will give you a 100% success. You know that everybody is different and everybody learns different. I have made my self study plan (here) for Korean. In my opinion, it works awesome for me, and I think that I’ve created this one with common sense. But in this post I don’t want to go deeper in “which plan should I follow”. I’d like to focus on the methods you might use to achieve your goals.

Let’s divide it into 4 (and optional 5) sections: Vocab, grammar, listening speaking (and eventually signs).

Vocab

Learning vocab is the foundation of your language. You can’t build a house only by a plan. You must also have the bricks. But I have some common “mistakes” people make. Here comes my list of what to avoid:

Long study sessions once a week

Reading the word 500x to think you might learn it this way

Letting the learnt words on the side

Not saying the words out loud

Never writing words out

Making vocab studying monotone

Learning the unuseful vocab you’ll probably never need

Those are so important points. In several books I’ve seen that the brain learns faster if it repeatedly does something. Also if you don’t use the things you’ve learnt after a certain time again, you might forget it again.

Try those things instead:

Study sessions over the whole week

Reading, writing and listening to the word

Make a record of the words you want to learn and listen to it

Once in a while repeat also your “good” words

Say words out loud which are complicated

Make studying fun (Use flashcards, post its, make it comfortable, make yourself a tea)

Learn vocab which is very frequent or which you will need specifically for your needs

Grammar

Grammar is a rather hard discipline. Also here common mistakes:

Learning the rules by heart and thinking “that’s it”

Only practicing the sentences in your book

Not making sentences on your own

Making grammar boring

Letting it be only because you’ve understood it once

Giving up on it just because it seems hard

Replace it by this:

Try to decode it before actually read the explanation.

Try to learn the sense behind the grammar.

Use what you’ve learnt and build your own sentences. You’ve got problems? Means that there are some points you should work on.

Grammar isn’t boring (okay sometimes) but you can make it fun if you use also like with vocab stuff you like. And also: If you always connect studying grammar with something what makes you happy, for example always make a smoothie if you study grammar, than it will also have an input on your studies. More about that in the next post)

Keep going and master the challenge

Sometimes it’s also good to take a break and try the next day. It might be that you’ve overworked yourself

Listening

And here again the top mistakes:

Not focusing on listening

Or listening to very fast music and complaining how stupid you are

Listening to “non real language”

Not listen at all

If I say that a language must be spoken, it also means that there are people which listen. And that means that you also have to study the other side of the language. So many people neglate this part. This was also my mistake in Japanese. But I have some good replacements:

Watch TV soaps or dramas (the most natural language)

Start from the very first day

Don’t get mad. It’s hard to understand things, but you will get better

Celebrate if you’re right

Take notes if you’ve heard something interesting

Listening will get your best friend. It doesn’t only improve your ear but also your writing. Because if you know how the pronounciation changes, you’ll also know how to write better.

Speaking

It’s hard to speak sometimes, but in this section you can also make mistakes by not even doing anything:

Being speechless

Not speaking from the beginning

Not learning the pronounciation properly

Not trying to get faster

It really depends on the person how fast the progress is in pronounciation, but if you don’t work from the very first day on it, it will get hard for you. Replace those methods by this:

Speak whenever you can

Talk to yourself

Try to find someone who might correct you

Learn the pronounciation properly

Try to get faster from time to time

Fluency comes where axienty goes (wow I should copyright that)

But don’t try to be perfect

Progress is made by many many little steps taken to get to a higher obstacle. Work smart and make those steps.

Optional: Signs

The probably hardest part for any Japanese/Chinese learner: the signs. I’ve seen and I’ve done even more mistakes. Use that and learn from me:

Writing a kanji over and over again

Thinking you might get along without signs

Buying course books which tell you how to learn “2000 kanjis in 2 months” or so

Not thinking when learning

Learning only one reading style

Learn a kanji and don’t repeat it

Okay guys. When I say that, please take me serious. You can’t learn 2000 kanjis in 10 days IF you don’t have a super brain. And I think it’s okay. Not everybody is talented, but there are other ways. And one way isn’t writing it 50 times per hour. Of course you have to write it, but not so many a day that you might get sick of them. And only because you’ve learnt one kanji, doesn’t mean that it will last for your whole life in your brain. Replace by:

Combine different methods 

Repeat signs

Buy if you are 100% sure you NEED that and if you’re not so sure about it, think while on work “Is it worth it that I am working for it now?”

Use what you’ve learnt. The feeling is so rewarding

Also here: Make it funny.

To self study a language it is best to develope his own style. But with some methods it will take you certainly much longer than with others. Try it out and see what works.


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6 years ago

I'm working on my 30pg paper pretty much all night, so feel free to ask!!

stationery-themed asks!!

gel pen: when are you most comfortable? ballpoint pen: tell me about the day you’ve just had fineliner: what’s your greatest achievement? highlighter: what are your best qualities? greylead: what is something you want to try for the first time? felt-tip: describe your aesthetic crayon: your earliest childhood memory scrapbook: something from your childhood that makes you smile sketching pad: describe yourself from a stranger’s point of view notebook: what’s your favourite quote? paper: what kind of book would you write? stapler: out of all the people you know, who do you think you are closest to? glue stick: what do you look for in a lasting relationship/friendship? tape: tell me about your longest friendship ruler: what line will you never cross? eraser: what do you consider to be your biggest mistake? scissors: ever had a bad break-up? calculator: list fifteen things that make you happy protractor: an unpopular opinion/angle you have on an issue sticky note: something about yourself you’d like to change stamp: a date that’s special for you and why bookmark: a book that means a lot to you and why folder: describe your family whiteboard: tell me your plans for tomorrow blackboard: tell me about a memory that has affected who you are today pinboard: what are you focusing on in your life right now? tablet: tell me your plans for the future stencil: who are your role models? envelope: tell me a secret


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