Alannah Studies

@alannahstudies / alannahstudies.tumblr.com

19 // Scotland // Law and French
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{ J A N . 2 0 . 2 0 1 5 }

Family Communication: I have an essay to finish, and three chapters to take notes on for a quiz tomorrow. This class requires so much attention, and it’s not even for my major.

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PLANNING YOUR WEEK

Start early!

  • Planning your week should start Saturday night. The week officially begins on Sunday, and Saturday night is the day to figure out everything that will be happening. By doing this, you do not have to spend meaningless time on the Sunday which commences your week with tasks such as planning. Everything should already be planned.

Find out what is on your plate for the upcoming week

  • Look at your school’s portal, or the syllabus, whatever your instructors use to inform you of tests, quizzes, essays and other assessments. Write down what is coming up this week!!! Know everything there is to know about what will be on your plate.

Use color

  • Color is an extremely effective categorization tool. It can allow you to distinguish between tests, quizzes, essays, homework assignments, extracurricular activities, health, personal activities, and more. Assign a color to each subsection of your plan, and create a key so you’re aware of what’s happening. Stay true to this color key, and don’t stray from it.

Prioritize

  • Your plan should feature the most important things to complete and the least important. However, your plan should also establish a general understanding of the ranking system these assignments fall under. If you have a very important test coming up which will count for a large portion of your grade, it should be featured earlier in and stressed more clearly in your plan. Utilize highlighters to clarify the importance level of different assignments.

Make time parameters

  • Making a plan is very important, but assigning time blocks to the plan is arguably even more important. Consider what you do every day after school. Think about how much you do after every day, and at what times you will be doing homework. Consider the length of time it takes to complete each assignment. Then, assign time blocks to each assignment. For example, you could assign “English Essay” for 4 pm - 6 pm, then “Break” from 6 pm - 6:30 pm, then “Math Worksheet” from 6:30 pm - 8 pm. This will keep you on track and going to sleep at a reasonable time.

Leave time for fun

  • It cannot be all school all the time - it is not healthy or conducive to effective living. Leave time for fun and breaks. This can manifest in reading a nice book in between assignments, or planning a hangout session with friends during the week. You only get one childhood, and you can NOT spend the entirety of it in academic mania.

Feature your extracurriculars and appointments

  • When you plan out everything, you have to include e v e r y t h i n g. This means that you must feature any meetings you have for extracurricular commitments, doctors appointments, personal appointments and more. This will ensure your plan is truly accurate.

Make copies!!!

  • Put your plan EVERYWHERE. There should be a copy in your planner, a copy in your bullet journal (if you have one), a copy on your desk, a copy on your mirror, and more. Put the plan anywhere you look often, and anywhere it won’t be drowned by other things.

U S E I T

  • Do not ignore the plan, now that you’ve spent all this time making it. Put it to good use! Keep it with you. Love it, learn it, and make it again next Saturday.
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(3/100

I didn’t take any pictures on the 3rd day of the 100 days of Productivity, so here’s two that I took the other day. Despite not having taken any pictures, I did a lot of research and dedicated my day to cleaning and organizing my room. That counts as productivity, right?

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itsmishyto

02|28|17 // 9:30PM

one chapter down, two more to go. plus, i have a trigonometry test on thursday. watch out for that review [i pray i get it on here in time and also pass that test]. also, i am pausing on my 100 days of productivity because of my busy schedule.
i got somewhat inspired by @mochi-studies note taking skills, which i clearly don’t have.
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30•12 UPDATED: study space organisation✎ Pic 1-overview….my pretty books shelf & the desk itself. Must haves: pens, plants, bullet journal, water, candles. I store journals/papers in the magazine file on the desk.

Pic 2-Old/complete works go into the files on the top shelf.

Pic ¾-Other pens/highlighters go in the drawer along with sticky notes, washi tape etc. I have an entire drawer full of empty notebooks and I intend to give most away to you guys, if you want.

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Last day now, keep it up! I’m contemplating staying home to study again just because the weather is so bad. Can’t decide, but right now my bed is just way more tempting then anything else 🙈🙈

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urjareads

I’m making history notes with my new Muji pens, and I have to say I adore the results - my handwriting has come out better than ever. I’m so happy with my purchases and recommend all of them!

You can see everything I bought here and request reviews or more examples of how I use them in my ask box!

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16.7.2016 6.19 p.m. - Hey everyone! I just came back from Stockholm yesterday, and what else would I, a stationery addict, have bought but more school supplies :D I’m sorry most of my posts are hauls these days, but it’s summer and I’m on vacation. Promise I’ll be back with proper posts when school starts :) Notebooks and postcards - Lagerhaus, washi tapes - Design Torger and Bookbinder’s design (all by MT), Moleskine notebook and the blue to-do list with roses - Akademi Bokhandeln, pens, notebook and the white to do list - Muji, golden ruler - Design Torget, planner - Åhlens.

I hope all my followers in Nice and Turkey are okay

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