#ib testing
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
nine days until they kill me
13 notes
·
View notes
Text
please remember to check in on your ib friends this may 🕊️
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
I don’t know how to make this into a joke but there was a yellowjacket in our test room and we just had to ignore it lol
#I mean it was implied that the test could be paused if any of us were allergic#idk I’m not as scared of yellowjackets as I am of other bugs#other bugs I have an irrational fear of what might happen if they decide to come near me#but with yellowjackets I’ve done plenty of just standing and waiting for them to get bored#idk#international baccalaureate#school#german#was the test#studyblr#I don’t know if y’all let non aesthetic posts in there but I studied for this#ib testing
1 note
·
View note
Text
i'm however many meters away the derivative of whatever the hell these numbers say i am idk what i'm doing man


187 notes
·
View notes
Text
Ib x Identity V
#THEY LOOK SO GOOD AAAAAAAAAA#ib#gamingedit#ib game#identity v#identityv#rpg maker#horror rpg maker#idv#I HATE THIS GAME WHY MUST IT HAVE SUCH BANGER CROSSOVERS!!!!#FIRST ANGELS OF DEATH AND NOW THIS. WHAT'S GONNA BE NEXT POCKET MIRROR????#the lord is testing me. but i'm stronger. i'm not coming back to this game. nope#...but holy sh!t#medeasgifs
149 notes
·
View notes
Text
he's here
#Testing#pizza tower#ibs paint x#fake peppino#Liminal space#Yay#Do y'all like when I draw them in or just edit sprites in
50 notes
·
View notes
Text
I learned today that the International Baccalaureate organization (the ones who run the IB tests) consider the topics lists for their courses to be copyrighted and confidential. They won't share them without a signed release.
I'm genuinely offended by this. I don't know how the fuck you're supposed to evaluate or understand the program without knowing what topics it covers! (They'll share the topics list with me, specifically, in the course of evaluating the test for my university; but I have to sign a release, and have to promise not to share them with colleagues, because they want my colleagues to sign the same release.)
And there's, like, no point to this. It's not a major secret what the topics a calculus course should cover are. (And sure, they do some stats and matrices or something too, and that's all the added info.) I think you can't even legally "copyright" the contents of these lists, because it's factual information and that's not copyrightable.
I'm really seriously tempted to issue an official recommendation to my university to stop giving any credit for IB tests until this policy gets reversed. If they won't freely share information on the program and the test, we'll have to assume that it's valueless and shouldn't earn credit.
(My only hesitation to that is it's probably a quixotic quest that would just hassle some innocent IB students. But if I can get a bunch of other departments to sign on I'll absolutely do it; IB can't sustain that policy if universities stop rolling over for it.)
76 notes
·
View notes
Text
this is the shit we should be analysing in ToK
Maybe LSD?
12 notes
·
View notes
Text
Cancelled Missions: Apollo-Soyuz Test Program II, with a Salyut Space Station

"The Apollo-Soyuz Test Project (ASTP) had its origins in talks aimed at developing a common U.S./Soviet docking system for space rescue. The concept of a common docking system was first put forward in 1970; it was assumed at that time, however, that the docking system would be developed for future spacecraft, such as the U.S. Space Station/Space Shuttle, not the U.S. Apollo Command and Service Module (CSM) and Soviet Soyuz spacecraft in operation at the time.

A joint U.S./Soviet space mission served the political aims of both countries, however, so the concept of a near-term docking mission rapidly gained momentum. In May 1972, at the superpower summit meeting held in Moscow, President Richard Nixon and Premier Alexei Kosygin signed an agreement calling for an Apollo-Soyuz docking in July 1975.
NASA and its contractors studied ways of expanding upon ASTP even before it was formally approved; in April 1972, for example, McDonnell Douglas proposed a Skylab-Salyut international space laboratory . A year and a half later (September 1973), however, the aerospace trade magazine Aviation Week & Space Technology cited unnamed NASA officials when it reported that, while the Soviets had indicated interest in a 1977 second ASTP flight, the U.S. space agency was 'currently unwilling' to divert funds from Space Shuttle development.

Salyut Apollo docking diagram
Nevertheless, early in 1974 the Flight Operations Directorate (FOD) at NASA Johnson Space Center (JSC) in Houston, Texas, examined whether a second ASTP mission might be feasible in 1977. The 1977 ASTP proposal aimed to fill the expected gap in U.S. piloted space missions between the 1975 ASTP mission and the first Space Shuttle flight.
The brief in-house study focused on mission requirements for which NASA JSC had direct responsibility. FOD assumed that Apollo CSM-119 would serve as the prime 1977 ASTP spacecraft and that the U.S. would again provide the Docking Module (DM) for linking the Apollo CSM with the Soyuz spacecraft. CSM-119 had been configured as the five-seat Skylab rescue CSM; work to modify it to serve as the 1975 ASTP backup spacecraft began as FOD conducted its study, soon after the third and final Skylab crew returned to Earth in February 1974. FOD suggested that, if a backup CSM were deemed necessary for the 1977 ASTP mission, then the incomplete CSM-115 spacecraft should get the job. CSM-115, which resided in storage in California, had been tapped originally for the cancelled Apollo 19 moon landing mission.
FOD also assumed that the ASTP prime crew of Thomas Stafford, Vance Brand, and Deke Slayton would serve as the backup crew for the 1977 ASTP mission, while the 1975 ASTP backup crew of Alan Bean, Ronald Evans, and Jack Lousma would become the 1977 ASTP prime crew. FOD conceded, however, that this assumption was probably not realistic. If new crewmembers were needed, FOD noted, then training them would require 20 months. They would undergo 500 hours of intensive language instruction during their training.
FOD estimated that Rockwell International support for the 1977 ASTP flight would cost $49.6 million, while new experiments, nine new space suits, and 'government-furnished equipment' would total $40 million. Completing and modifying CSM-115 for its backup role would cost $25 million. Institutional costs — for example, operating Mission Control and the Command Module Simulator (CMS), printing training manuals and flight documentation, and keeping the cafeteria open after hours — would add up to about $15 million. This would bring the total cost to $104.7 million without the backup CSM and $129.7 million with the backup CSM.
The FOD study identified 'two additional major problems' facing the 1977 ASTP mission, both of which involved NASA JSC's Space Shuttle plans. The first was that the CMS had to be removed to make room for planned Space Shuttle simulators. Leaving it in place to support the 1977 ASTP mission would postpone Shuttle simulator availability.

A thornier problem was that 75% of NASA JSC's existing flight controllers (about 100 people) would be required for the 1977 ASTP in the six months leading up to and during the mission. In the same period, NASA planned to conduct "horizontal" Space Shuttle flight tests. These would see a Shuttle Orbiter flown atop a modified 747; later, the aircraft would release the Orbiter for an unpowered glide back to Earth. FOD estimated that NASA JSC would need to hire new flight controllers if it had to support both the 1977 ASTP and the horizontal flight tests. The new controllers would receive training to support Space Shuttle testing while veteran controllers supported the 1977 ASTP.
The ASTP Apollo CSM (CSM-111) lifted off on a Saturn IB rocket on 15 July 1975 with astronauts Thomas Stafford, Vance Brand, and Donald Slayton on board. The ASTP Saturn IB, the last rocket of the Saturn family to fly, lifted off from Launch Complex (LC) 39 Pad B, one of two Saturn V pads at Kennedy Space Center, not the LC 34 and LC 37 pads used for Saturn IB launches in the Apollo lunar program. This was because NASA had judged that maintaining the Saturn IB pads for Skylab and ASTP would be too costly. A 'pedestal' (nicknamed the 'milkstool') raised the Skylab 2, 3, and 4 and ASTP Saturn IB rockets so that they could use the Pad 39B Saturn V umbilicals and crew access arm.

Once in orbit, the ASTP CSM turned and docked with the DM mounted on top of the Saturn IB's second stage. It then withdrew the DM from the stage and set out in pursuit of the Soyuz 19 spacecraft, which had launched about eight hours before the Apollo CSM with cosmonauts Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov on board. The two craft docked on 17 July and undocked for the final time on July 19. Soyuz 19 landed on 21 July. The ASTP Apollo CSM, the last Apollo spacecraft to fly, splashed down near Hawaii on 24 July 1975 — six years to the day after Apollo 11, the first piloted Moon landing mission, returned to Earth.
The proposal for a 1977 ASTP repeat gained little traction. Though talks aimed at a U.S. Space Shuttle docking with a Soviet Salyut space station had resumed in May 1975, no plans for new U.S.-Soviet manned missions existed when the ASTP Apollo splashed down. Shuttle-Salyut negotiators made progress in 1975-1976, but the U.S. deferred signing an agreement until after the results of the November 1976 election were known.
In May 1977, the sides formally agreed that a Shuttle-Salyut mission should occur. In September 1978, however, NASA announced that talks had ended pending results of a comprehensive U.S. government review. Following the December 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, work toward joint U.S.-Soviet piloted space missions was abandoned on advice from the U.S. Department of State. It would resume a decade later as the Soviet Union underwent radical internal changes that led to its collapse in 1991 and the rebirth of the Soviet space program as the Russian space program."
-Article from "No Shortage of Dreams" blog: link
Drew Granston: link
source, source, source
#Apollo-Soyuz Test Program II#Apollo–Soyuz#Apollo Soyuz Test Project#ASTP#Apollo CSM Block II#CSM-119#Docking Module#SLA-18#Saturn IB#SA-209#Rocket#ASTP II#Space Shuttle Salyut#Salyut Space Station#Soviet Space Program#Soyuz-U#cancelled#Cancelled Missions#1977#my post
45 notes
·
View notes
Text
Cora as Swan Prince AU? Maybe? Idk, I’m not rlly feeling it but I figured I might as well post
#one piece#one piece doodles#corazon one piece#rosinante corazon#corazon op#donquixote rosinante#one piece corazon#op corazon#corazon fanart#swan au#swan princess#swan Prince au#cora san#donquixote corazon#corazon#op rosinante#one piece rosinante#donquixote rocinante#lovingly drawn with my fingers on a teensy tiny phone screen using ibs paint#teeth fairy#I drew this for two reasons#the first was bc I wanted to test out a new brush#the second was bc I just re-read my childhood copy of the swan princess and had to make it abt my blorbo<3#1pc#pushing my ‘Cora’s animal is a black swan’ agenda with this one lol#fairytale au#someone write this#i hate drawing men#but I do it… for him<3#my shitty art
16 notes
·
View notes
Note
you're legit so silly i love ur ib art AND ur mlp art rahh
fjskdj glad you dooo tysm!! 😚😚💕💕
#i legit JUST woke up and made that in 10 minutes lmaoo#i know most ppl know me from my mlp art but I've been trying to branch out and practice drawing other things#and these two goobers have been my test dummies#mlp ib is just Right u know heehee#asks
162 notes
·
View notes
Text
lit paper 2 is looming over me like russian roulette gun but with an almost full barrel only missing one bullet
I barely remember anything from one of the units, I've only read one of the three poems I should have ready and I don't wanna talk about tartuffe... super excited!
#ib diploma#my post#ibdp#international baccalaureate#ib testing#ib lit and lang hl#tartuffe#carol ann duffy
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
FANTUBE FANART SINCE II IS PEAKKKK
#inanimate insanity#ii testube#ii fanart#fantube#fan fanart#testube fanart#fan x test tube#ii#ii fantube#ii art#digital art#ibs paint x#still don’t know how to tag things#cw eyestrain ??#ya
19 notes
·
View notes
Text




“No more Johnny test art for the week.” I say on a Monday
P.s. this is the image that one’s based off
#they’re revolting against black and white#johnny test fanart#Johnny test#fanart#my art#Susan test#Mary test#i.b.#mary ib#ib#Gary ib#cursed crossover#parody#this is stupid
17 notes
·
View notes
Text
Very grateful for summer holidays and for my insane sock knitting tendencies rn because:
I had to unravel a sock that I test knit, but before doing that I knit an entire different sock as like, idk, a palate cleanser? A break? Idk I found it very relaxing, at least. And because I spent a day and a half knitting a different sock, I wasn't even upset about literally unraveling an entire sock that I actually spent quite a lot of time on (because new pattern + colour work). Instead I just feel excited about the prospect of all these socks that I'm sure I'm gonna love.
#this might be surprising but i haven't actually knit all that many socks for myself#if im not incorrect ive knit a total of 5 pairs of socks for myself since i began knitting in 2018#this is not counting the first pair of chunky socks i knit that immediately felted when i washed them#it is however including the 1 pair that i ended up giving away#and those were a test knit and i did intend to just knit myself another pair#but then I didn't have enough yarn and it just kinda fizzled out#because i reaalised that i dont care for cables on socks#its something about the extra needle and having to count rows that i dont vibe with#like sure I'll do colorwork because its just a piece of paper and i can easily figure it what row i was on#but apparently cables is where i draw the line#anyway im not in the process of knitting THREE pairs of socks for myself#which i think is a major slay#that's like an entire other post ib the notes from me thanks for coming to me ted talk#amalie talks
8 notes
·
View notes