Try changing questions like "Help me study" to "Teach me mitosis in 4 simple steps with diagrams."

#StudyHacks #AITools #SmartLearning

Practical tips that actually work. Share if you find this helpful.

#EducationTips #LearningStrategies #StudentLife #AIAssistance #StudyMethods #QuadraticEquations #BiologyMemory #ChemistryLabs #SpanishVocabulary #MitosisStudy (3/3)

Study and Review Materials form re-open for the academic year, based in different office

A form that gives students access to past exams and study guides, which was lost when the Office of Diversity and Inclusion was closed last school year is once again available this semester. The Scholarship and Supplemental Academic Services’ study and review materials request form, which resumed access on Aug. 28, is now located in […]

The Lantern

I have been experimenting with the pomodoro technique as a tool for improving my focus while trying to write a scientific paper (with a very short deadline).

I don't know if I've used it particularly correctly, but I think it does help focus.

#pomodorotechnique #pomodoro #focustechniques #timemanagement #StudyMethods

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomodoro_Technique

Pomodoro Technique - Wikipedia

@vortex_egg I'll offer a general answer:

  • This is something you should be thinking about constantly.
  • My own problem isn't for want of materials, but for focus in getting through a specific work.
  • (I'm avoiding doing precisely that in answering your toot, BTW....)
  • (No, I'm not blaming you, it's on me.)
  • I try to keep tabs on the works I really want to read.
  • I'm leaning toward having a specific index-card deck that's devoted to this, on the basis that it's 1) physically manifested and 2) can be arbitrarily re-ordered as well as 3) easily supports works being moved to the "it's been read" category.
  • "#BOTI" is another related concept: Best of the Interval. Keep track of what the best books/articles/concepts of the past week/month/year/decade have been. You'll end up with a very highly-curated reading list to recommend to others.
  • Scan both references and citations for promising new material. A reference with an interesting association / concept, or citations of a highly-significant work, are both promising prospects.
  • Mortimer Adler's How to Read a Book, especially the later chapters, is an excellent guide.
  • Consider sources as conversations or interrogations.
  • Have no regrets at bailing from an unrewarding source.

I'll also look at others' recommendations, reading lists and syllabi, etc. I'm finding with time that individual recommendations and mass-market recommendations are often far less fruitful than the methods above. Subject-matter expert recommendations, on the other hand, especially for older and obscure works, are often gold.

Much new publication is not much worth reading. The back-catalogue is highly underappreciated.

#CuratingReading #Research #LiteratureSearch #StudyMethods