The Ultimate Guide to Time Management – Part 2
Learn about project management tools you can use to improve your productivity and time management in part 2 of Sam’s blog post!
The Ultimate Guide to Time Management – Part 1
Curious about how to become more efficient with your time? Read Sam’s post to learn strategies on how to use online tools to maximize your time!
Back on the Road: How to Be Productive on Your Commute
Discover ways to stay academically productive on your commutes whether you transit, drive, or walk!
Engineering Your Life: Designing Better Routines
Learn how to improve your time management using advice from engineering staff and students in the second part of the Engineering Your Life series.
Hybrid Schedules: How to Get the Best of Both Worlds
Helpful tips and advice to help you learn while alternating between synchronous and asynchronous courses.
How to Achieve Balance during Reading Week
We all approach reading week differently. Ivy shares why it is important to make time for both relaxing and studying!
Navigating Time Differences for Online Exams
Time differences can make online learning complicated, and that’s even more the case for scheduled events like exams. Read on for our tips for being prepared for your big day!
The Pros, the Cons, and the How-To’s of Work School Balance
Should you work part-time during your studies at UBC? Read all about the pros and cons of doing so, and how to manage your priorities if you do!
Belonging to Tomorrow: Can Procrastination Be a Good Thing?
What is the brain science behind procrastination? Can procrastination as a student sometimes be a good thing?
What Does it Mean to Be a Professional?
‘Professionalism’ is one of those buzzwords which often gets tossed around by people who want to give you career advice. But what does it mean to be a professional? Rarely does anyone give a precise definition of what it means to act professionally, and when someone does, they generally produce a rigid list of rules […]
How Using a Day Planner Made Me a Better Student
I spent the majority of my undergrad in a way that I imagine is probably fairly common amongst the student body population…