What a breakfast!

My first post this month (late, I know) and it was great seeing all the new bloggers and some alumni. Nice meeting you all who were there (I remember Sam, Tyler, Courtney, Josella, Glenn, Chanel, and Kim I think. Sorry if I forgot to mention others I may have forgotten!).

To those who missed out, we had a nice breakfast FEAST. Breakfast sausages, pancakes (and one heart shaped one!), timbits, bananas, grapes, cookies.. definitely enough to feed a family of 8 or something. It was interesting to hear you guys speak about your experiences on UBC so far and definitely had a lot of laughs about science vs. arts courses! Organic Chem is a great course Chanel!

Hopefully I’ll get to meet the others some other time. Keep those blog posts going! I promise to.. eventually!

Posted in Uncategorized

How to Not Cram the Night Before: Samantha’s Approach to Midterms

Time and time again I’ll be reading some poor student’s blog or twitter feed and what I see is basically this: “OMG my exam is tomorrow gotta study all night omg omg I’m so freaked out my brain is exploding!”

More or less, anyway.

Now, I am not a crammer.  I’ve never done it, and I very nearly always walk into my exams feeling confident and relatively anxiety-free, at least when I compare myself to those around me.  And, most importantly, my marks turn out just like I want to, as evidenced by the scholarships UBC keeps offering me.

What’s my secret? Easy: start studying a week before your test. (At least.)  That’s really all there is to it, besides figuring out how you study best.  What I do is do about an hour or so of reading for about three days starting a week before the test, so the material is all fresh in my mind. You can’t start memorizing if you can’t even remember what you’ve covered in the last month.  After those three days, you do some hard core studying in the next three days (preferably on a weekend). Condensing your notes, guessing and practicing answering questions you think will be on the test, testing yourself.  Then, the night before, you get to breathe. Relax. Read over the study notes you made, test yourself a little bit more. What you should find is that as you read over those notes, your brain goes, yes yes, I know this stuff already. And you know why? Digesting information over a longer period of time is going to make it stick way better than if you stuff it all in your head the night before when you’re all stressed out.  And, you’ve accomplished what the course is actually about: learning, as opposed to memorizing for one test and then promptly forgetting everything after it’s over.

If you have several midterms a week, it can be easy to focus on one subject and forget about the other tests, and just study for each test as they come. But, if you do an hour or half an hour of studying each day for each subject a week before the exam, you’ll know your stuff better, and have less work overall the night before each test.

A bonus for using this method: now you have great study notes for when finals come around! Not to mention, you’ll remember more of the material from your midterm when it comes time to write that final exam.

I hope this helps you through your time of midterms!

TEDxTerry talks 2012

Tickets for TEDxTerry talks 2012 are now on sale! (Here’s a direct link for ticket sales; $10 a ticket) For those who don’t know what TEDxTerry talks is, click here to check out my previous blog posts about the annual event. Or, from the Terry website:

Generation Y, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, Canadian Music, the Enbridge pipeline, education, gender, land rights in Brazil, earthquakes, the digital era and…toilets. What do these things have in common? They are some of the topics that your peers are going to speak about in their own TEDx Terry Talk, on November 3rd in the Life Sciences Building at UBC.

These are UBC’s most fascinating and engaging students coming together for a day, giving the talk of their lives, sharing their ideas and discussing their vis
ions for UBC and the world. Don’t miss the opportunity to be there, with students, alumni, faculty, administration, and members of the general public watching this unfold during a one day, student-led conference.

Tickets: http://tedxterrytalks2012.eventbrite.com/
Twitter: @terryubc — #TEDxTt
Additional information: http://www.terry.ubc.ca/tedxterrytalks/

Never been to the TEDx Terry Talks? Listen to this special episode of our podcast featuring highlights from last year: http://www.terry.ubc.ca/2012/01/18/the-terry-project-podcast-6-the-2011-tedx-terry-talks-highlights/

This year, our speakers include (titles subject to revision):

Alumni

  • Ryan Vandecasteyen: Social Capital & the No Tankers Movement

Graduate

  • Alisha Hackinen: Crafting a New Kind of Land Manager through -Problem Based Learning
  • Sam Eifling: Dying for land in Brazil
  • Eric Brown: The “Trickle-Down” Effect: How A Toilet Can Save Your Life

Undergraduate

  • Nick Thornton: Your boyfriend wants to be pretty
  • Eunice Hi: Don’t Just Follow Your Passion – The Missing Link, A talk for Generation Y
  • Rebekah Parker: Lessons from a 6.3: on Community Engagement and Resiliency
  • Alexander Wuolle: Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
  • Stefana Fratila: WEIRD ERA: Being sincere in an era of digital creation
  • Joseph Glaser: The Canadian identity crisis

Be sure to get tickets before they sell out!

Free eBooks!

Do you like reading? Do you have an eReader? Do you like reading things on the computer? Would you save money to print out a book you like yourself instead of purchasing one?

If you answered yes to any of these questions, you may be interested in checking out Project Gutenberg, which is a collection of free eBooks (free because the copyright has expired) available for the general public.

(Thanks to Hack College for sharing!)

Facebook Distracting You From Studying?

I know many of you are currently in the middle of studying for midterms. I also know that many of you who should be studying for midterms are instead stalking friends on Facebook, tweeting the latest gossip on Twitter, and reading blogs such as this. Ever wish you had the drive to just get down to studying? Perhaps technology, which so often distracts us in the first place, may have a solution. How about an application that will allow you to block those most distracting websites when you’re supposed to be studying? Hope this helps :) Happy studying!

Mac users, check out SelfControl.

Windows and Linux users, check out SelfRestraint.

(Thanks to Study Successful for sharing!)

Creative Advertising

I just saw this really cool post about really creative advertising that Science World has going on right now. Thanks to Dave for sharing!

On that note… Science World is free this weekend! Be sure to check it out!

Vancouver Community Science Celebration: Free Weekend!
Saturday, October 13 & Sunday, October 14

Join Science World in celebrating the science all around us by visiting on this free weekend presented by BC Hydro and Genome British Columbia. Visitors will get to interact with Canadian Space Agency astronaut; explore Science World’s new spaces at TELUS World of Science (including parts of its new outdoor Ken Spencer Science Park); take a virtual tour of the ATLAS control room at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider; and much, much more. This weekend only!

This is the first event of its kind at TELUS World of Science, and we want you to be there. Let’s celebrate the science all around us at the Vancouver Community Science Celebration at TELUS World of Science!

This Community Science Celebration is part of Around the Dome in 30 Days: A Month-long Science Extravaganza. Come celebrate the cool science that happens all around us with an eye-popping marathon science show, live demonstrations and exhibits presented by real scientists from our community, hands-on activities for the whole family, and much, much more!

UBC Bands: British Favourites

I meant to post this a few days ago, but the UBC Bands are putting on a concert tonight, at 8 pm in the Chan Centre. The Symphonic Wind Ensemble (the one I’m playing in) played a preview concert yesterday at noon, which went pretty well! Finally I was able to play my part without being overly nervous 😛

Anyway, if anyone ends up seeing this before it’s too late, try to come to the concert! It’s gonna be a good one.

Works by Holst, Hesketh, Grainger, Sparke.

Kappa Sigma is Gone… …and…?

So, apparently, UBC’s Kappa Sigma chapter has been shut down. Apparently this is newsworthy for the Ubyssey. I personally never really understood what fraternities/sororities offered back to a university campus. Nor did I ever figure out why the fraternities/sororities were the only clubs on campus allowed to discriminate their membership (I’m not saying other clubs should be allowed to discriminate; I’m saying it’s bizarre that they are allowed to discriminate). And I never understood the “necessary” cloud of secrecy that seemed to always be shrouding the Greek system.

Anyone able to enlighten me?

Posted in UBC

TED on Science Communication

Melissa Marshall’s tips for science communication?

Be sure to state “So What?” However, I don’t like her biomedical example–not all research does, nor do I think it should, have anthropocentric focus.

Minimize jargon.

Make everything as simple as possible, but no simpler.

–Albert Einstein

Don’t use bullet points–bullets kill.

And finally…

Yes, that makes about as much sense to me as it probably does to you; it should probably divide by the inverse of relevance instead…

Overall, I like the points she brings up about science communication. (I think too many people on Youtube are slamming her because the end equation is wrong.) Scientists are still, for the most part, struggling with engaging the public. I think these are important things to consider in doing so effectively.