What to Do When School Gets Hard (for the first time)

howtomusicmajor:

Total honesty time: I was a slacker in high school. I don’t mean that in the sense that I got bad grades, or that I didn’t do extracurriculars. I mean that in the sense that I was the kid who got good grades without having to try, so I never did. Try, that is. This meant that when I got to college, I got a surprise: professors want you to actually study! Like, with the textbook and everything!
Needless to say, I had a rough time figuring out how to do this “studying” thing, and I know I’m probably not alone in this boat. The good thing is, I’ve figured this out, for the most part, so now you can learn from my mistakes.

  1. Assume every class is going to be your hardest, going in. The day you don’t assume you’re going to have to put in five hours minimum studying for the first real test in a class is the day you will really regret. Until you get a feel for a certain professor, treat it like it’s super hard.
  2. Schedule in studying time and STICK WITH IT. DO THIS. Or else you will end up like me, making friends with the other lone person who inhabits the study lounge at 1 am. Don’t be me, guys.
  3. Never underestimate the power of teaching others. Seriously, I definitely have kinda taken advantage of my classmates, because I’m the person who tries to explain stuff and writes out the impromptu study guides. By teaching them, though, I’m actually prepping MYSELF to wreck the curve. Basically, once you know it well enough to explain it to others, you’re golden.
  4. Do ALL the readings. The professor that assigns the most readings is also the professor who expects you to have learned the most from them, in my experience. Also, don’t just highlight stuff: write important points that you would want to highlight in your notes. Highlighting is just coloring for grownups – it’s fine, but it’s not going to help you learn. It’s just going to catch your eye later.
  5. Don’t judge a professor’s tests by their lecture style. Imagine: a sweet little 5 foot nothing professor, dressed to the nines every day and super kind to everyone. My professor who fits this description causes about a third of her students to retake her classes every year. Bigshot business guy with a ridiculously high consulting rate and a weird robe he always wears? 98% pass his classes. Focus on the material, not the prof.
  6. Save your homework assignments. It turns out that in college, homework is 95% of the times something that you can actually study from. Do it, do it well, then hang on to it.
  7. Know your preferred study habitats. Do you like to study around a lot of people or by yourself? Are windows a distraction or a necessity? Is the library great or just too far away to bother with? Keep an eye on when you study best and then try to replicate it later.
  8. Get rid of unnecessary distractions. Turn off your phone. Notifications are Bad for concentration. Close your email unless you absolutely need it. Have a drink and someone to nibble on if you use that as an excuse to avoid studying. Maybe avoid studying with that one person if you are distracted by existing near them.
  9. Plan out regular breaks. Tell yourself every half hour you can go on Facebook, or wander down the hall and talk to someone, or read a chapter of that thing you’ve been working on. Just have something planned out that you can actively work towards. Not just having an abyss of time to fill with studying can be really useful.

As for studying itself:

Notecards, re-writing notes in a different format, having someone quiz you, making study guides, and writing practice essays about stuff have all been super useful for me in some respect or another.

Other studying help:

You’ve got this. We can study together.

exponential63:

meinenaffenhosen:

exponential63:

jeremy-ruiner:

forza-tricolor:

ravenclawcore:

abrahadabra66:

theactivevoice:

These men refused to clap for Jenny Beavan, who won an Oscar for costume design in Mad Max: Fury Road because she was rocking a leather jacket instead of a dress to the Oscars. But look at her confident walk! 

What a bunch of stuck up pricks

For real though. 😒😒😒

Men ain’t shit.

More power to her.

IM STILL MAD ABOUT THIS. THIS IS ABOUT MORE THEN WOMEN THIS IS ALSO ABOUT HOW ACTORS AND DIRECTORS TREAT DESIGNERS AND TECHNICIANS. This blatant lack of respect is so vile and disgusting in an industry that is already hard enough on women. 

‘How actors and designers treat designers and technicians…’ while disregarding that both (especially costume) contribute so much more to the performance and to the finished film than we tend to realise.

Reblogging again to add in this spot on closing comment from the Sydney Morning Herald (x):

Scorned directors can glower, but with more Oscar nods than Leonardo DiCaprio himself, Beavan doesn’t need to give a damn.

For those curious…

2016  Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) – Won
2011  The King’s Speech (2010) – Nominated 
2002  Gosford Park (2001) – Nominated 
2000  Anna and the King (1999) – Nominated 
1996  Sense and Sensibility (1995) – Nominated 
1994  The Remains of the Day (1993) – Nominated 
1993  Howards End (1992)  – Nominated 
1988  Maurice (1987)  – Nominated 
1987  A Room with a View (1985)  – Won
1985  The Bostonians (1984)  – Nominated

…not to mention all the other nominations and wins she’s had from, well, just about everywhere.

EXACTLY. And that’s ‘only’ the Oscars. Across her career, Beavan has notched up 17 wins (solo, shared or joint) and 38 further nominations. Including

BAFTA Film Awards

2016 Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) – Won

2011 The King’s Speech (2010) – Nominated

2002 Gosford Park (2001) – Won

2000 Tea with Mussolini (1999) – Nominated

1996 Sense and Sensibility (1995) – Nominated

1993 Howards End (1992) – Nominated

1987 A Room With A View (1985) – Won

1985 The Bostonians (1984) – Nominated

Primetime Emmy Awards

2010
Cranford
Part 2 (2007) – Won

2008
Cranford Part
1 (2007) – Nominated

2002
The Gathering Storm (2002) –
Nominated

1997
Emma (1996) – Won

1986
Lord Mountbatten: The Last Viceroy
(1986) – Nominated 

BAFTA Television Awards     
             

2010
Cranford
Part 2 (2007) – Nominated

2008
Cranford Part
1 (2007) – Nominated

2003 The
Gathering Storm
(2002) – Nominated