• RayJW
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    103 months ago

    I’d definitely recommend Anki over Quizlet. Among many things it is very versatile, doesn’t cost a subscription, and has a better retention algorithm in my experience. Can’t comment on the rest although Photomath definitely helped me a few times :)

  • @AliasVortex
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    83 months ago

    Uhhhh, Cheg can be… problematic in academic circles, many universities view it as cheating and will enact harsh penalties (in line with their academic integrity policies) if you get caught using it.

    I know this reads like a “don’t get caught” statement, but I’d advise that you’d be much better off getting homework help at your university’s tutoring center(s) or professor/ TA’s office hours.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 months ago

      It’s viewed as cheating because it is cheating lmfao. I know because I used it to cheat. You can almost always find solutions to the exact homework you’re trying to do.

      • @AliasVortex
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        23 months ago

        Absolutely correct! I was mostly trying word it so that it was less “annoying rule follower pontificates the virtues of morality” and more “it doesn’t matter how you justify it, or what you think you’re doing, the university will see it as cheating and will act accordingly”, plus people tend to be more receptive to advice when they don’t feel like they’re being attacked.

        On the anecdotal side, my college job was doing desk-side IT support for one of the deans offices at my University. One of our roles was recording Academic Integrity Policy Hearings (basically a so you got caught meeting, where everyone has a chance to tell their side of the story to a panel of faculty members and they’ll decide the punishment, usually ranging from zeroing out the assignment to expulsion) as a CYA for the university in the event someone decided to break out the lawyers. I saw so, so, many students hauled into over Cheg related offenses.

        Hell, one of my best friends got burned because another student helped them with some Themo homework and was using Chegg (unbeknownst to my friend).

  • @[email protected]
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    53 months ago

    Alternatively:

    1. Don’t visit the lectures of a subject you dislike for the entire semester
    2. Don’t look at the lecture slides either
    3. Don’t even do the (voluntary) homework
    4. Start learning 2 weeks before the exam by lazily watching last year’s recordings at 2x speed
    5. Start actually preparing for the exam 1 week later
    6. Somehow pass the exam

    This is a great and absolutely-not-stressful-in-the-slightest plan.

  • @trashgirlfriend
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    33 months ago

    I would also add Obsidian to the software list so you can goof off setting up an Obsidian vault and tell yourself it’s to make yourself more productive

  • @[email protected]
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    23 months ago

    I have tried to bury memories about my life as a student, but posts like this bring it all back.

    Like say for a term paper, it usually went something like this.

    1. Pick from among the Prof’s suggested topics.
    2. Attempt to find resources on said topic.
    3. Fail at #2 and return to #1.
    4. Finally find a well-covered topic and breathe a sigh of relief with 1 week to go.
    5. Attend a lecture/TA session and discover to my horror that I’ve misunderstood the topic completely. Return to #1.
    6. In desperation, try to find reference materials on all possible topics at once. 2 days to go.
    7. Spend a day sifting through everything I’ve managed to gather hoping to find anything at all I could write 1000+ words about.
    8. Final evening. Plunk down a 2L coke, heat up some Jamaican patties, and start pulling an all-nighter.

    I guess for exams, there was less running around but more like #8 on repeat for a couple of weeks straight. After that, my mom calls telling me what great plans she has for Christmas. I’m usually just coming down with the flu by this point.