most people: *organize their bookshelf by authors, alphabetical order, ect*
me: iām going to organize my bookshelf purely by vibes and contrasting colours
Was not expecting that
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Did someone call an ambulance
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Or the whole cheesecake š
i think some of you need to eat a slice of cheesecake and listen to ambient rain noises ten hours
By plantpotters
1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 8ish (my ancient chromebook is not really compatible with zoom + a little programming). Online learning only made these even more apparent. My heart goes out for the kids in K-12 the most though. If this were to happen when I was in K-12 I probably wouldn't have passed my classes.
I feel that in the studyblr community nobody actively talks about the study environment some of us have, so shoutout to those students that:
⢠live with their parents (not everyone goes to college/uni where they have dorms, and even then, not everyone can afford it)
⢠have to deal with parents/family members constantly arguing in the background
⢠work / have to worry heavily about just getting by (paying rent, groceries, medication)
⢠need loud music to study and drown outside noises
⢠can not "study prettily" at coffee shops
⢠take care of other family members, and thus have to be ready to drop whaterever they are doing to assist them at any time
⢠can not concentrate or get "in the zone" no matter what they do
⢠do not have a personal computer/tablet
⢠do not have a room of their own
⢠are neurodivergent and the advice of most study masterpost/tips is not applicable.
You are valid, you are seen, you are not alone. If nobody has told you already: if you are trying the best you can then the best you can is good enough.
sincerely, a student who needed to hear this.
Today I am trying to get ahead with my classes. My classes started this past Wednesday and it is now Saturday. I feel very disorganized because my asynchronous classes have me completing modules, but not all of the due dates are posted. It's really hard to find a schedule, but I'm going to set that up today. Today I'm working on:
1) reading curriculum guidelines on online experiences
2) making my initial discussion post about it
3) finding an old algebra or geometry textbook in my basement to help me brainstorm ideas for the 5+ hours of related internet instruction I'll be creating for a class
4) setting up an outline of my first lesson plan
5) reading 2 short chapters for another class
6) watching a presentation
7) looking at a long term assignment
8) making another initial discussion post
*I'd work at my desk but my father currently has Netflix blaring and is snoring. I can still hear literally everything but this is the quietest room in the house. If I go near him I'm probably going to end up screaming at him about how impossible it is to work in this house. My state is currently in full shut down (no indoor dining, no libraries for studying, I'm not allowed on school campus, etc). I guess my room is as good as it gets.
me making another post for my 12 followers knowing that it will get approximately 4 notes
If there's a loving, caring, and stable adult who wants to take in a child... why are you trashing this????? Is this a cultural thing????? I don't understand this. I knew one girl who was from Bolivia and her white parents adopted her and they kept her in soccer, threw her a lavish quinceanera, and kept her in other culturally appropriate things. These were the whitest people I've ever met, yet they did a wonderful job raising Hannah. It's possible to be culturally aware of how you are raising an adoptive child... idk why that's even a debate. Educate yourself. A great example is hair maintenance classes for white parents who adopt a little black girl. Her confidence is boosted by walking into whatever life throws at her if adults help her navigate her hair. I don't get why that's a problem. The list goes on. Disappointed that there's shade being thrown anywhere.
White couples that adopt non-white kids
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Today and yesterday were school-free days. I got my first dose yesterday morning (!) But I ended up having a shitty reaction. I had a headache, low grade fever, aches + chills, fatigue, and a little dizziness. I'm better now and that's honestly how I respond to a majority of vaccines. I just took a couple days off to relax too. I'm so relieved I got that first dose though. I'm literally so glad.
they/them ... future high school math teacher ... junior math major + secondary math cert ... plants ... dogs
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