Tuesday, 26 January 2010

Being a Green Student Pt 1

1. Find about about your Uni/halls of residence/local council's recycling policy and stick to it. Although rummaging through your own bins to separate paper from plastic isn't all that glamorous, I'm sure most would agree it is worth the life of a polar bear...
2. Switch off your plug sockets, lights and all electricity outlets before leaving your room in the morning or evening.
3. Print on both sides of the paper. If possible, print your readings two pages per page, i.e shrink 2 A4 pages for them to fit on 1 A4 landscape printout. Easily done, lighter to carry and SO much better for the trees!
4. Recycle your notes and required readings. If you used a bunch of texts for an assignment that you don't need any more, ask around the people doing the same course as you if anyone else would need them for any other assignment. In some cases, if a certain class has prescribed a long list of readings, share them out amongst a group of friends, each reading one or two of the set readings, and then organise a report-back study session where you each present what you learned from your delegated reading, thus saving time, paper and energy.
5. Buy second hand. Amazon and Ebay are excellent. The most I ever paid for any of my course books was £3.40. Cheap and environmentally friendly AND if you keep the book in good quality you can always resell it for a profit, so lucrative as well!
6. Buy Organic. and local for that matter. It generally isn't all that much more expensive, its better for you and the environment, and usually has less packaging.
7. Turn the heating down and put on an extra layer.
8. Buy one bottle of water a week and fill it up with tap water daily to carry with you. Or better yet, buy a sports bottle or thermos type water holder that will last the legnth of your career and save you £1 a day on bottle water.
9. Use scrap paper. The backs of unsuccessful printouts work fine for your own personal brainstorms and notes. Think pre-recycling recycling.
10. Walk, skip, jog, sprint, bike, skate, rollerblade, unicycle or at worst, use public transport to get to uni or out and about. A 10-20 minute brisk walk to campus and back home would qualify as your daily excercise fix, and is good for the polar bears. If this is impossible then support public services by using public transport reducing 20 vehicle's carbon emissions to 1.
11. Buy from charity shops or arrange a clothes swap with some friends. Preloved and preowned clothes do little damage to the environment and a lot of good to the purse strings.
12. Always do a full load of laundry. Unless its ABSOLUTELY necessary, wash on a cold wash, and use eco-friendly washing powder and softener, which are usually cheaper than the more plush brands on the supermarket shelves! Invest in a clothes horse to airdry your clothes as tumble dryers waste ridiculous amounts of energy and often shrink or cover your clothes in other people's lint! If you don't have a full load, consider doing a group load with a friend whose personal hygiene you trust!
13. Carry your own shopping bags when you pop to the supermarket or highstreet. If you do use store plastic bags, be sure to reuse them as dustbin liners or next time you go shopping.
14. Use ring folders or plastic wallets rather than notebooks. Notebooks often tend to go unused come the middle of the binding, meaning some poor tree died for only half a notebook's worth of use.
15. Use online resources and soft copies as much as possible. avoid printing, scanning or photocopying and if necessary live by your own designed notes made about said resource.

Wednesday, 8 July 2009

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Sunday, 5 July 2009

What will help me survive at Uni?

General ideas of things you would need to make your uni life more comfortable, easy and productive (And frugal by the by!). This is assuming you have your accomodation sorted for the year...

1. Good telephone contract (Virgin and other have great deals for £12 a month or so. Perfect for students).
2. Transport. Some Uni's offer discounted transport for their students within the reaches of their campuses. Its best to take advantage of this sooner rather than later.
3. A wallet or planner to keep your student ID cards, transport, Library, gym and any other membership cards together in a safe place.
4. 2 sets of bed linen & towels, so that when one is in the wash, you can use the other
5. Collapsable clothes horse (save money and the environment by not using a tumble-dryer)
6. Portable Laundry Basket or bag (some supermarket 'environmental' woven bags are cheap, look lovely and hold about a machine's wash of clothes at one time)
7. Young Person's Coachcard (£10 http://www.nationalexpress.com/coach/Offers/index.cfm); 16-25 Railcard (£30 http://www.railcard.co.uk/) and any other discount transportation is essential for visiting friends, family or going away for a weekend or easter break.
8. Lots of Passport sized photos (its amazing how many of these you get through in a year)
9. A Facebook account is helpful, not just for keeping track of new friends, but also for administration of groupwork, and finding out about events and societies within the Uni.
10. A wok (cooks everything!) a medium sized saucepan, a sieve, a sharp knife, Cutlery, Crockery, teatowels, tupperwares, baking tray.
11. A Laptop with a webcam (macbook macbook macbook!) to Skype overseas friends and family.
12. A bike, if your home is far from your campus, its a great way to keep fit, as well as protect the environment (obviously a bike lock and insurance as well)
13. lots of copies of you CV, Passport and/or student Visa for work and residence purposes
14. An alarm clock (for those lovely 0900 am lectures. Preferably one other than your cellphone, anything to nobble our dependency on phones!)
15. I will add more as I think of them. Suggestions WELCOME!

x

What will I need to study at Uni?


OK, so this post is more a channel for me to express my undying love for stationary. Apologies as it is also quite UK-Centric, but I guess it would generally apply to any country really. As a student aiming for a first-class degree, I found the following items either essential or very helpful for studying throughout the year. As a language student, some of them are quite languages-specific, but I've added a list of general bits and pieces I know friend's in other disciplines have found helpful.

General

1. Diary or Daily Planner(with 1 day to a page, or 2 to pencil in lectures, seminars, classes, meetings, and see how much time is left over for other things)
2. Pencils, erasers, sharpeners (to pencil things into the diary :P) *
3. Pens (Black, Blue, Green and Red for staple Uni work)*
4. Coloured felt-tips, pencils, crayons, pens ( Most people work and remember better when using colour, in notes, mind maps, diary etc)
5. Highlighters (Invaluable for presentations, seminar readings and notes)
6.Staplers, paper clips, plastic folders (to hold the bits and pieces of paper you will invariably be given in bulk for each course)
7. File-Folders (One big one with lots of dividers so everything is in one place, or one per subject/course so that your load is lighter to carry)
8. Clear pencil case to keep it all in (clear because most uni's stipulate a clear pencil case during exams, so it saves buying another one. You can also clearly see what's there and what's missing)
9. Index Cards/Revision note flashcards (handy for presentations, flashcard learning, and small and handy to carry around)
10. Post-its (to keep pages in books, and to clearly mark things. Different colours also help organisation, perhaps colour-coded according to subject)
11. audio-recorder thingy (to record lectures to listen to at a later date, or upload on your mp3 to revise whilst doing something else)
12. File, Box File or attractive Box (to store returned assignments and last year's material in case you need it again) or you could RECYCLE !!!
13. Lined & Plain Paper, or Exercise notebooks (again could be colour-coded according to subject, but trust me, you can never have enough of these!)
14. An address book, to note specialist vocab, or new spellings (any book with A-Z somewhere, or you could make your own)
15. A comfy bag, over the shoulder or backpack to carry it all in (emphasis on Comfy!)

*it's best to buy a whole pack of these at the beginning of the year, not only will it work out cheaper, but you won't have to worry about running out of supplies during exam or assignment period

A few subject specific supplies:

1. Dictionaries, thesaurus' (thesauri?) Phrasebooks for languages*
2. Grammar exercise workbooks for languages*
3. Audio recorders (Essential)
4. Calculators (University's usually recommend which are required for specific courses)
5. Geometry sets
6. Laptop**
7. Graph paper/note books

*Before buying instore, often second hand or even first hand editions can be bought for a fraction of the selling price online (ebay/amazon etc) or from students who did the same course the year before. I bought 6 coursebooks (priced between £7-£12 each) for around £1-3 each online and from ex-students.
**If you plan your time and work right, you should be able to rely on the Uni's own computer workstations. although a laptop does make working more flexible, most good uni's should have more than enough computers for their students.

Acknowlegdements to Stella Cottrell's Study Skills Handbook for inspiration http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?is=1403911355 recommended for anyone starting University.

Hmm...con que empezar???

I reckoned something fairly banal would do as my first post, as I sit here mindlessly surfing the net (currently have to stay home as I am 'on call' for one of my various uni jobs), I find myself compiling music video playlists on Youtube (word to the wise and frugal, it saves £0.79 per song to download RealPlayer and store music on your computer from YouTube). So far, I'm after a feel-good playlist, the kinda song to play first thing in the morning to start your day off: sweet as greek-style yoghurt and honey; zesty as a tall glass of OJ;

Right, so here's goes, my list is as follows:
1. Here comes the Sun- Beatles (one can but smile and sway!)
2. 1234-Feist (From Macbook ads)
3. New Soul- Yael Naim (Also from Mac Ads)
3.Feelin' Groovy- Simon and Garfunkel
4. Sweet Lady- Supercharango (From Magnum ads I think)
5. The Sweetest Thing- U2
6. Brown Eyed Girl- Van Morisson (or alternately, the everclear cover)
7. Say What you Want- Texas
8. Manana por la Manana- Robin Espejo
9. Suddenly I see- KT Tunstall
10. Beautiful- Damian Marley

Obviously this would differ from person to person, so additions and/or suggestions are always welcome!

besos x