Liss | Adult | Studyblr (Self-Studying) | Langblr (Korean and German)
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The perfect memoriating technic that make me have a 9,2/10 in the part of economics in one subject
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Dealing With Executive Dysfunction - A Masterpost
The “getting it done in an unconventional way” method.
The “it’s not cheating to do it the easy way” method.
The “fuck what you’re supposed to do” method.
The “get stuff done while you wait” method.
The “you don’t have to do everything at once” method.
The “it doesn’t have to be permanent to be helpful” method.
The “break the task into smaller steps” method.
The “treat yourself like a pet” method.
The “it doesn’t have to be all or nothing” method.
The “put on a persona” method.
The “act like you’re filming a tutorial” method.
The “you don’t have to do it perfectly” method.
The “wait for a trigger” method.
The “do it for your future self” method.
The “might as well” method.
The “when self discipline doesn’t cut it” method.
The “taking care of yourself to take care of your pet” method.
The “make it easy” method.
The “junebugging” method.
The “just show up” method.
The “accept when you need help” method.
The “make it into a game” method.
The “everything worth doing is worth doing poorly” method.
The “trick yourself” method.
The “break it into even smaller steps” method.
The “let go of should” method.
The “your body is an animal you have to take care of” method.
The “fork theory” method.
The “effectivity over aesthetics” method.
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sentinel's academic weapon challenge 8.11.24 | day one
sleep: 7 hrs 12 minutes
routine: morning routine completed successfully! let's work on the rest this week
deep focus: 1 hour 비타민 한국어 1 (Lesson 1-3)
body: 30 minute walk
reading: Song of the Six Realms- Judy I. Lin
reflection: i'm proud of myself today for actually spending time outside and doing things i've been meaning to do for a while! let's keep going!
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Skip Google for Research
As Google has worked to overtake the internet, its search algorithm has not just gotten worse. It has been designed to prioritize advertisers and popular pages often times excluding pages and content that better matches your search terms
As a writer in need of information for my stories, I find this unacceptable. As a proponent of availability of information so the populace can actually educate itself, it is unforgivable.
Below is a concise list of useful research sites compiled by Edward Clark over on Facebook. I was familiar with some, but not all of these.
⁂
Google is so powerful that it “hides” other search systems from us. We just don’t know the existence of most of them. Meanwhile, there are still a huge number of excellent searchers in the world who specialize in books, science, other smart information. Keep a list of sites you never heard of.
www.refseek.com - Academic Resource Search. More than a billion sources: encyclopedia, monographies, magazines.
www.worldcat.org - a search for the contents of 20 thousand worldwide libraries. Find out where lies the nearest rare book you need.
https://link.springer.com - access to more than 10 million scientific documents: books, articles, research protocols.
www.bioline.org.br is a library of scientific bioscience journals published in developing countries.
http://repec.org - volunteers from 102 countries have collected almost 4 million publications on economics and related science.
www.science.gov is an American state search engine on 2200+ scientific sites. More than 200 million articles are indexed.
www.pdfdrive.com is the largest website for free download of books in PDF format. Claiming over 225 million names.
www.base-search.net is one of the most powerful researches on academic studies texts. More than 100 million scientific documents, 70% of them are free
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-ˋˏ sentinelstudies' Academic Weapon Challenge ˎˊ
The new school year is almost upon us, and this year, you'll be primed to be an absolute academic weapon. This challenge is inspired by SOM STUDIOS' Project 50, because that challenge is fantastic and I was planning on doing it again when the school year started. It starts 01 August and runs until 31 August, with the goal of prepping you to take the new school year by storm.
We're all crushing our goals this year. Let's do this.
General Rules
Prioritize good sleep. Get a minimum of 6 hours of sleep each night, aim for the best quality you can, and work your way up to 8 hours. I'm all for the occasional all-nighter when you get super excited about your work, but seriously, you can't work at your full potential if you're not well rested.
Have a routine and stick to it. You choose: morning, bedtime, sitting down to study/work, whatever. Bottom line is you build a routine that contributes positively to your wellbeing and gets you in the right mindset for whatever it is you're about to do. If you think you'll struggle with Rule 1, this is a good chance to build a healthier bedtime routine. (Work smarter, not harder)
Spend an hour in deep focus. I know not everyone's studies have started up again, so I'll be a bit lenient on this one. You pick what your deep work includes. If your semester's started, probably pick studying/homework. This chunk also works well for prepping for your upcoming studies, like getting your Notion workspace set up or cleaning out your hard drive. If you want, put the hour towards learning a new skill. I'm not gonna police this, just find something positive and study-related to work on for an uninterrupted hour each day.
Take care of your body. Decide what that looks like for you, then stick to it. Do a fitness challenge with friends, reduce sugar in your diet, get into that sport you've been wanting to try. Like with the other rules, bottom line is you're finding something that positively impacts your health and wellbeing.
Read something that isn't a textbook. You can still read nonfiction, but the point is that you're reading something that isn't a class requirement. Want to read nothing but smut for a month? Have at it. You just need to spend 15 minutes a day reading something that's not study-related.
End each day with reflection. Think about what you did well, what you didn't do so well, and how you can be better tomorrow. If you want more structure for this, I'll be sharing my weekly reflections starting on Saturday (3 Aug.) that can easily be modified to be a daily reflection.
Daily Challenges I'll be tossing out little stuff during the month to keep everybody motivated and working towards their goals. I'll be sharing study tips, resources, holding mini daily challenges to try out, and releasing free templates to use the exact structures/formulas I'm using to become an academic weapon.
Get Involved We'll be using #sentinels awc (and I'll be tracking it)! I'll be documenting every day this month, and I encourage you to do the same! Come hang out, share what you get up to, and hype each other up!
If there's enough interest, I might even start a Discord to keep things organized—shoot me a message/ask/reply to this if that's something you would join.
Got a question? Reply to this post, shoot me a DM, invade my askbox, whatever tickles your fancy. If I've got an answer, I'll give you that answer. Plain and simple.
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die Olympiade - @none-ofthisnonsense, gestern erst kam das Wort auf
i looked at these a second too long and now "olym" looks like an impossibl combination of letters....
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how to play pokemon games to study japanese
I just started playing pokemon omega ruby in japanese and have been having a great time with it! The language has been surprisingly simple so far, and I've found it a lot easier to get into than animal crossing. I used a few different resources, so here's a guide on how you can play pokemon in Japanese for language learning:
Choosing a pokemon game
I used this video from gamegengo to decide which game to play and ended up with omega ruby. The tldr of his video is choosing a game that you have access to (in Japanese), that's easy to read (graphics quality makes a huge difference for japanese characters), that's in level. He documented his findings here
Access: Emulators, especially on the PC, are great options for older games. This is especially true for games that are region-locked and need a specific Japanese version to play the game in Japanese. Multi-language support wasn't added until pokemon x/y, so anything older needs a JP version game
Readability: characters on switch games look great, 3DS is also very good. DS is good, anything older can be a bit of a challenge
Hiragana, Kanji, Furigana: prior to pokemon black and white, all text was in hiragana. This can be really challenging if you're used to seeing text with kanji, it can make words much harder to recognize. However, furigana has only been added in arceus and scarlet/violet
Level: All of the pokemon games rank between N3 to N2 except for arceus, which is N2 to N1. I am studying for N3 and am not having much trouble with omega ruby, although I am slow at reading and this is one of the easiest rated games. Someone who is a complete beginner would struggle a lot with these games depending on the amount of reading they intend to do (you don't really need to read to be able to play pokemon)
2. Game resources
There are a variety of resources to help make playing video games in japanese easier. Normally, I would like to just play the game and absorb the content without having to look up a lot of it. Unfortunately, since most pokemon games don't include furigana and aren't voice acted, there is no way to learn how to read a word with kanji you don't know other than to look it up.
Poke Corpus: amazing tool for querying text dumps from different pokemon games. Select the game you're playing and the language, and then write a query with some of the text from a sentence you want to look up. Works great, keep in mind the search is exact (including spacing). It also shows results from other languages, so in addition to pulling all the text for lookup you can see the english translation (which is localized, so is not always a direct translation)
Yomitan: a japanese pop-up dictionary browser extension. Very helpful if you ever read japanese on a computer. I used this video for getting it set up. Very customizable with different dictionaries
Game2Text (PC only): if you're playing a game on an emulator on your computer, this is a great tool for grabbing the text straight from the game. Additionally, since this works inside a browser, any browser extensions (like yomitan) work with this.
Google translate lens: I really don't like this, because it isn't going to be as accurate and it won't show you individual word translations, it will just blur out and translate the entire sentence. But works in a pinch
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Hi ! Do you have any korean youtubers to recommend ?
P.s I mean youtubers that speak korean in their videos.
Regardless thanks for answering!
Hi! Thanks for your patience. I don't watch a ton of Korean YouTubers, but I do know a few! I like watching makeup YouTubers like ANDA and Hyojin Cho because their tutorials involve a lot of talking and their videos have subtitles. Makeup tutorials are especially helpful in my opinion because you can see what they are explaining; you can match their words to their actions even if you're not sure what those words mean.
I also occasionally watch some Korean ASMR because I think they can be good sources of natural spoken Korean, although I know not everyone enjoys ASMR lol. I like Judy ASMR and Latte ASMR, but just type in "Korean ASMR" and you'll get a ton more.
I don't super watch many Korean YouTubers that have multiple people in them (so that you can hear actual conversation), but there are some channels that I know of, like kizzle and Hi-teenager (although Hi-teenager's videos are kind of uncomfortable to watch--take one look at their thumbnails and you'll understand lmao).
If you're a K-pop stan, a lot of bands put out vlogs and variety shows. I sometimes watch EN O'CLOCK by Enhypen, which is nice for hearing natural conversation.
Those are some options I've got! Feel free to leave a comment with any other YouTubers out there :) Thanks for the question! 화이팅!
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Studying can be a daunting task, especially when we're not feeling motivated or don't know where to start. Luckily you are on Tumblr, where the Tumblr Studyblr community lives!
A group of individuals who share their study tips, techniques, and challenges to help motivate and inspire others.
As a member of this community, I've compiled a master post of study challenges created by Studyblr bloggers. These challenges aim to help students stay on track, improve their focus, and achieve their academic goals. So you can join in and start achieving your academic potential!
>> 𝐍 𝐨 𝐭 𝐞
If you know any other challenges or you've created ones yourself and want to share them, do message me with the link to the post so I can update the list! I too will be creating some, more coding-related ones as I am a coding studyblr (codeblr) blog! That's all and hope you find a challenge you'd like to start!
@tranquilstudy's Studyblr Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@sub-at-omic-studies' Study Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@wecandoit’s Study Challenege - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@cheereader's The “Back To College” Study Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@myhoneststudyblr's The Studyblr Community Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@ddaengstudies' Wabi-Sabi Studyblr Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@hayley-studies' 30-Day Study Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@ddaengstudies' Zoomester Studyblr Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@cheereader's Summer Studying Challenge: Southern Hemisphere Edition - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@cheereader's Horrortober Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@caramelcuppaccino's Autumn Studying Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@myhoneststudyblr's Winter Studying Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@ddaengstudies' Winter Wonderland Studyblr Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@cheereader's South Hemisphere Autumn Challenge: 2023 Edition - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@stu-dna's January Study Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@planningforpatience's February Study Love Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@littlestudyblrblog’s March Study Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@wilstudies's April Studyblr Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@smallstudyblrsunite's The June Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@stu-dna’s October Study Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@alfalfaaarya’s 21-Day Productivity Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@work-before-glory's G's Productivity Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@moltre-se-s' 30 Day Langblr Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@drunkbloodyqueen’s The language challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@caramelcuppaccino's 20 Language Learning Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@prepolygot’s Langblr Reactivation Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@onigiriforears's Target Language Reading Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@prepolyglot's Langblr Reactivation Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@xiacodes' 5in5weeks Coding Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@xiacodes' FreeCodeCamp Study Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@friend-crow's Tarot Study Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
@dreamdolldiary's 100 Days Reinvention Challenge - 𝒍 𝒊 𝒏 𝒌
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Langblr Reactivation Challenge
Hello everyone! As you may know I've created this challenge to help revive the langblr community. It's a three week challenge designed to get you back into learning languages and (hopefully) give you ideas on how to study and share your knowledge of them. It is completely optional to do, but try to reblog other people's posts if you aren't participating.
The challenge is designed to be done daily, however if you miss a day, you can go back and do it later or continue from where you left off. I do encourage you to do your best to keep up with the challenge though. Tag your posts with #langblr reactivation challenge so that others can find your posts.
If you have any questions, please send me an ask or a message and I'll do my best to answer it.
I'll put the prompts under a read more so this post isn't ridiculously long. Good luck to everyone participating! Remember the best way to promote the langblr revival is by reblogging other people's work.
Week 1
Day 1: Create an introduction post about yourself. What's your name? What languages are you studying? What languages do you hope to study? What do you hope you'll get out of this challenge? Add whatever else you’d like to your introduction post!
Day 2: Write a list of goals you have for your target languages. Make both long term and short term goals. An overall goal could be to have the ability to talk with native speakers with ease and a smaller goal would be to finally learn that difficult grammar point that's been plaguing you for ages. How will you achieve them?
Day 3: Create a list or a Mindmap of vocabulary topics. Start with a broad topic and narrow down to more specific topics. An example could be bedroom - furniture - closet - clothes or travelling - languages - study words - school supplies. Keep a hold of this because you'll use it later to create vocab to study. Some broad topics to start with: house, school, work, travelling, friends and family, nature, city. Feel free to use these or think of your own. Share your mindmap so others can get some ideas if they need it. Here are some mind map creation tools (x) (x) (x).
Day 4: Create a vocab list for one of the topics you created yesterday, if you want to make more, feel free to make as many as you like! Share your list and reblog other people's lists. And most importantly, make sure you study these words!
Day 5: Find a video in your target language and watch it as many times as you need to in order to understand it. Make a post about the video. What was it about? Did you like the video? Was it difficult to understand? Make sure you link the video. Try to write your answers in your target language, but if you can’t that’s okay!
Day 6: Look up 3 idioms in your target language and explain what they mean and how you use them in a sentence (with an example!).
Day 7: Send asks to other langblrs (bonus points if it's in a shared target language!) asking them about whatever (for example, ask how their day was, ask questions about their target languages, or share some of your thoughts with them). If you receive one, answer it! You can ask more than one person and it can be on or off anon.
Week 2
Day 1: Over the next week, create a playlist/playlists of songs in your target language(s), they can either have a specific mood or genre or they can be a collection of songs you've discovered. When you feel like you're done with your playlist, share it so others can find some new songs. If you already have a playlist, you can add songs to it and update it.
Day 2: Write an explanation on a grammar rule in your target language (such as verb tenses, exceptions, word order, etc). Include sentences to show how and when it is used.
Day 3: Either make a vocab list or find a vocab list you like and make sentences using those words. You can make them as long or as short as you like. This is a good way to contextualise vocab words and learn them in context. Share your sentences and highlight the vocab word.
Day 4: Record yourself reading an article, short story, or passage (basically anything written in your target language). Listen to it and see if you can point out any areas you can improve with your speaking and any areas that you're doing well. You can post your recording if you wish.
Day 5: Post at least 2 songs that you like in your target language. Make sure you add a link to them so people can go listen to them.
Day 6: Share a study tip you have. This can range from how you organize your notes to playlists that help you study to apps you use to review. Just something that you find makes studying easier (and more fun).
Day 7: Share with everyone some langblrs you enjoy seeing on your dash, try to put at least 5 people (and make sure you @ them!).
Week 3
Day 1: Remember that playlist you made/are making? Take a song you really like and make a vocab list of words you don't understand, learned from the song, or recognize but don't quite remember. Post so others can see and link the song. If you have extra time and/or want a bit more of a challenge, translate the song as well, either into English or another language.
Day 2: Write about a festival or holiday that is celebrated in a country that speaks your target language. This can be either something you’ve celebrated yourself, have wanted to participate in, or have never heard of before. You can write this in any language you’d like.
Day 3: Make another vocab list from the list you made at the beginning of the challenge. If you are learning two or more languages, make the vocab list in 3 languages (meaning for example: French, German, and English or Japanese, Arabic, and Ukrainian).
Day 4: Find a recipe written in your target language and translate it into your native language (or another language of your choice) or find a recipe in your native language and translate it into your target language. Bonus points if you actually make it (share pictures if you do)!
Day 5: Create a collection of resources you use to study/learn your target language. Add links to them if possible so others can also use them.
Day 6: Create a post explaining a grammar rule that you had/are having difficulties learning. If you’re currently having difficulties, do your best to explain and ask others to help you understand it better. Include example sentences in your explanation.
Day 7: How do you feel at the end of this challenge? Did you meet any goals while doing this? Do you feel more confident in your language abilities? Where do you think you'll go from here? Answer these questions either in your native language or your target language.
Hopefully you guys enjoy/enjoyed this challenge. After you've completed the challenge, I encourage you to continue your studies in your target languages and support others in theirs.
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Free Phone/Tablet Icons & Backgrounds
It's Day 10 of the 12 Days of Giving!
Sometimes refreshing your digital space is the spur of motivation you need. To give your homescreens a cute, playful look - here are 100+ icons for all your favourite apps. Replace them and enjoy a funky look! Features include:
5 alternating colours
3 included backgrounds
instructions guide
103 icons
Download Free Here
Check back in each day for a new free item! Hopefully they're all useful and a fun way to end the year 🥰🎁
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Free Online Language Courses
Here is a masterpost of MOOCs (massive open online courses) that are available, archived, or starting soon. I think they will help those that like to learn with a teacher or with videos. You can always check the audit course or no certificate option so that you can learn for free.
American Sign Language
ASL University
Arabic
Arabic for Global Exchange (in the drop down menu)
Arabic Without Walls
Intro to Arabic
Madinah Arabic
Moroccan Arabic
Catalan Sign Language
Intro to Catalan Sign Language
Chinese
Beginner
Basic Chinese
Basic Chinese I. II, III, IV , V
Basic Mandarin Chinese I & II
Beginner’s Chinese
Chinese for Beginners
Chinese Characters
Chinese for HSK 1
First Year Chinese I & II
HSK Level 1
Mandarin Chinese I
Mandarin Chinese for Business
More Chinese for Beginners
Start Talking Mandarin Chinese
UT Gateway to Chinese
Chino Básico (Taught in Spanish)
Intermediate
Chinese Stories
Intermediate Business Chinese
Intermediate Chinese Grammar
Dutch
Introduction to Dutch
English
Online Courses here
Resources Here
Faroese
Faroese Course
Finnish
A Taste of Finnish
Basic Finnish
Finnish for Immigrants
Finnish for Medical Professionals
French
Beginner
AP French Language and Culture
Basic French Skills
Beginner’s French: Food & Drink
Diploma in French
Elementary French I & II
Français Interactif
French in Action
French for Beginners
French Language Studies I, II, III
French:Ouverture
Intermediate & Advanced
French: Le Quatorze Juillet
Passe Partout
La Cité des Sciences et de Industrie
Frisian
Introduction to Frisian (Taught in English)
Introduction to Frisian (Taught in Dutch)
German
Beginner
Beginner’s German: Food & Drink
Conversational German I, II, III, IV
Deutsch im Blick
Diploma in German
Rundblick-Beginner’s German
Advanced
German:Regionen Traditionen und Geschichte
Landschaftliche Vielfalt
Hebrew
Biblical Hebrew
Know the Hebrew Alphabet
Teach Me Hebrew
Hindi
A Door into Hindi
Business Hindi
Virtual Hindi
Icelandic
Icelandic 1-5
Indonesian
Learn Indonesian
Irish
Introduction to Irish
Italian
Beginner
Beginner’s Italian: Food & Drink
Beginner’s Italian I
Introduction to Italian
Italian for Beginners 1 , 2, 3 , 4 , 5, 6
Intermediate & Advaned
Intermediate Italian I
Advanced Italian I
La Commedia di Dante
Japanese
Genki
Japanese JOSHU
Japanese Pronunciation
Sing and Learn Japanese
Tufs JpLang
Kazakh
A1-B2 Kazakh (Taught in Russian)
Korean
Beginner
First Step Korean
How to Study Korean
Learn to Speak Korean
Pathway to Spoken Korean
Intermediate
Intermediate Korean
Nepali
Beginner’s Conversation and Grammar
Norwegian
Introduction to Norwegian
Norwegian on the Web
Portuguese
Curso de Português para Estrangeiros
Pluralidades em Português Brasileiro
Russian
Beginner
Easy Accelerated Learning for Russian
Advanced
Reading Master and Margarita
Russian as an Instrument of Communication
Siberia: Russian for Foreigners
Spanish
Beginner
AP Spanish Language & Culture
Basic Spanish for English Speakers
Beginner’s Spanish:Food & Drink
Fastbreak Spanish
Introduction to Spanish
Restaurants and Dining Out
Spanish for Beginners
Spanish for Beginners 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
Spanish Vocabulary
Intermediate
Spanish:Ciudades con Historia
Spanish:Espacios Públicos
Advanced
Corrección, Estilo y Variaciones
Leer a Macondo
Spanish:Con Mis Propias Manos
Spanish: Perspectivas Porteñas
Swedish
Intro to Swedish
Swedish Made Easy 1, 2, & 3
Ukrainian
Read Ukrainian
Ukrainian Language for Beginners
Welsh
Beginner’s Welsh
Discovering Wales
Multiple Languages
Ancient Languages
More Language Learning Resources & Websites!
Last updated: March 1, 2017
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A guide to thesis writing, from a master's student
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September 2021 : master’s thesis, archival research, library mornings, and caramel coffee 🍎🍂
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2022 printables, downloads, etc
Here is a list of all the printables I currently have available for download!!
ALL PRINTABLES IN ONE FOLDER!
2022:
yearly + monthly calendars (january to december, A4 + letter, monday & sunday)
new years/goals/resolutions page (2022 calendar, to do lists, 365 day tracking, monthly goals, general goals, bucket list, resolutions)
2023-2023 student printable planner (200 pages)
Digital planners:
2022 digital planners
free undated digital student planner (months, weeks, days, and more)
free 7 day daily planner (+ alternative covers, stickers)
free digital stickers
Timed schedules/planners:
study schedule printables
week at a glance printables
4 designs pastel weekly planners
weekly planner
weekend planner
daily planner
10 minute weekly study planner
Studying:
student organisers (daily planner, weekly planner, weekly meal planner, weekly semester planner, weekly class timetable (15 minutes & untimed), 10/20/30 minute time tracker)
student printables (daily + weekly + monthly planner, 30 habit tracker, class overview and timed worklog)
languages study pack (two options - 16 pages of premade tables or 8 pages of customisable/blank tables)
study planner pack (daily + weekly + monthly study planner, 10 minute planner, study plan, study tracker, subject and chapter summary, and priority breakdown)
DIY flashcard printables (2 covers, dotted, lined, grid, Q&A versions)
assessment planner (two options)
subject to do list planner
study session planner
back to school printable set (includes 2017-18 academic year calendar (monday + sunday start), semester overview, assessment + grade tracker, revision checklist, untimed weekly organiser, study session tracker)
exam printable pack (includes topic revision checklist, definitions + formula sheet, essay + project planner, weekly schedule)
binder / subject covers / topic pages (16 colours)
Finance planners:
weekly, monthly, yearly finance and budget trackers (7 colours)
Misc:
to-do list printables
100 days of productivity tracker printable (explanation of 100 days challenge here)
literary techniques and devices sheet (goes with this post)
note taking printables (includes dotted, grid, lined, Cornell paper)
organic chemistry printable
Motivational quotes/art printables:
motivational monday quote printables
Handwriting:
cursive handwriting cheatsheet (goes with this post)
normal handwriting cheatsheet
Whilst these printables are free of charge, it would be amazing of you to check out my Ko-fi account!
Downloads | Printables | Instagram | Youtube | Pinterest | Twitter | Etsy Shop | Discord
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