Brazilian girl 🇧🇷 || Leo ♌️ || Mechanical Engineering student 📚 || Living in US 🇺🇸||
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Text
My classes will be back this week... don't know what to do to stop this growing feeling of emptiness and lack of excitement. Lighting up candles is not doing the job anymore hahaha
51 notes
·
View notes
Text
Every accomplishment starts with the decision to try.
4K notes
·
View notes
Text
How to set up a research journal
This is just one way you can set up a research journal but it's helping me tremendously so maybe it also works for you. My set-up is partially inspired by this video by Answer in Progress and I suggest you check out their curiosity journal.
Preparation
First you need a notebook. The trick is to find a notebook that you're not afraid to "ruin". We all want a really neat, aesthetic research journal, but the reality looks more like hasty scribbles, but that's okay, that's where the research breakthroughs happen.
I personally bought a cheap lined notebook from Søstrene Grene that I thought looked cute and put a sticker on it. That way I feel good about using it but I also don't mind when my handwriting gets messy because it was only like 3€.
You should also stock up on pens you like writing with. Different colour highlighters and post-its are also a good idea but not a must. Keep it cheap but comfortable.
Title Page
Here you should put down all the really important information: year, title, deadlines, word count, supervisors. Maybe add an inspirational quote to spice it up but keep it simple and relevant.
Key
This should either be your next or your last page. I personally use the last pages of my journal so I can add thing and find it easier. Your key is there to list abbreviations and symbols.
For example, I have different symbols for statistics, dates, new terminology, questions, breakthroughs, important notes and abbreviations for the most important terms in my field. It's shorter to write T9N than Translation.
The trick here is to have enough abbreviations and symbols to save time and effort but not so many that you constantly have to look back and forth between your page and key. They should be memorable and not easy to confuse.
Topic Mind map
If you hate mind maps you can skip this of course or use a different method but what helped me is to visualise all the topics that connect to my research project in a mind map. I then colour-coded the main groups of topics with my highlighters. It helps me to keep an overview on how many topics I need to do research on.
Proposal
If you're writing a thesis/dissertation it can be helpful to have a page set aside for your proposal and take some bullet point notes on methodology, chapter structure, research context, aims and objectives and think of some titles. You can also do this for your lit review and a list of works to include.
Hypothesis and Question Pages
I set aside four pages for this but you can adjust this to your needs. The first page is my hypothesis. It doesn't have to be fully formed yet, it can just be bullet points with five question marks. You can always revise and update it but it is important to keep an eye on what you're actually trying to find out.
The next idea is basically just stolen from Answer in Progress: a section for big questions, medium questions and little questions. These aren't necessarily hypotheses you aim to answer but questions you have about your topic that might be good to look into (maybe they lead somewhere, maybe they don't).
Research Notes
Now comes the big, fun part. Research notes are allowed to be a little messy but you should have some sort of system so you can actually find what you're looking for afterwards. I'm currently just looking at books and articles so that's what my system is based on. You can totally adjust this to include other forms of research.
What I do is that I put down and underline the author and title of my source. Underneath that I use my highlighters and mark the topic of the paper based on how I colour-coded them in my mind map. You might have to do this after you've finished reading. For example, if a text talks about censorship and dubbing in Germany, three of my topics, I will draw three lines in light blue, dark blue and red, the colours I chose for those topics. This way you can easily browse your notes and see which pages are talking about which topics.
When it comes to the actual research notes, I include the page number on the left and then take bullet point notes on whatever is relevant. These are often abbreviated and paraphrased but if something is especially important I will write down a full quote.
As mentioned earlier, I have a key of symbols I use so I can simply put down a '!' in order to differentiate a research breakthrough from a normal note. You can insert your own thoughts much more easily when you know you'll be able to tell them apart later on. At the end of each article, book or even chapter I write down my main takeaway.
Other Notes
This is your research journal and you can do with it what you want. I also added lists of films that might be relevant for my research, a list of databases and publishers to check for papers and tips on research strategy.
If you're working with interviews or surveys you could write down your questions. If you're nervous about your research you could include a list of reasons why your research project is important or why you're doing it. You can include a to-do list or a calendar to track meetings with supervisors. Anything that helps you with your research.
1K notes
·
View notes
Text
Saturdays lately
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
Reblog if youre any active studyblr in 2024
Reblog so i can find my people!!
572 notes
·
View notes
Text
4/100 days of productivity
7 notes
·
View notes
Text
03/100 days of productivity
restocking on supplies from MUJI 📚
14 notes
·
View notes
Text
02/100 days of productivity
Woke up too early and decided to read in bed.
1 note
·
View note
Text
day 01/100 days of productivity
Am I back? Maybe I am…
This final year is getting the best of me… but let’s finish strong!
1 note
·
View note
Text
Prepping for the new semester 📖
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
Like or reblog if you’re an active studyblr! 💗🐣
59 notes
·
View notes
Text
videos to watch if you need motivation
here’s a vlogtober from 2016
a 15 hour study with me
a Christmas study with me
I’ll show you how valuable Elle Woods can be! Scene
how to stay motivated to revise for exams
university busy week vlog
another study with me!!!
watch this if you’ve been rejected by your dream school/job (particularly oxbridge, but applicable to anything really) -> you can skip the interview experience if you want
how to get organised and motivated
studying for the duration of a cup of tea
how to get stuff done
note-taking tips
4K notes
·
View notes
Text
𝖠𝗋𝗍 𝖻𝗒 𝖠𝗇𝗇𝖺-𝖫𝖺𝗎𝗋𝖺 𝖲𝗎𝗅𝗅𝗂𝗏𝖺𝗇 | 𝖨𝖦: 𝖺𝗇𝗇𝖺𝗅𝖺𝗎𝗋𝖺_𝖺𝗋𝗍
132K notes
·
View notes
Text
And here we go again.
Grad school is back tomorrow. Anyone else is super excited, but also dreading it?
9 notes
·
View notes
Text
some snapshots of a good memory from before money got so tight… my cash app is $olivemarie7. any little bit helps. love you all
428 notes
·
View notes
Text
40K notes
·
View notes