I was looking to get into baking bread recently, it seems pretty fun. So far I've only got this, but if I find anything else I'll be sure to post it here:
ChainBaker (https://www.youtube.com/@ChainBaker):
Adam Soygusea (https://www.youtube.com/@aragusea):
Random one off notes
I've never done anything else aside from the basic yeast milk flour > dough > rise > oven with egg wipe or making faux italian dough for pan pizza, so I'm pretty excited to learn it. Especially also because it seems to be pretty free to learn/technique oriented. If you have any resources or other things I'd love to hear from you down below!
I was also thinking of making a post about coffee, I think geb has some good experience with that too so maybe he could pitch in :evil:
https://www.edx.org/course/introduction-to-social-psychology
I recently finished this course, maybe about a few months ago but only as recently as near the end of last month I wanted to make notes for it as reference and study. (input output) I kinda did that THEN I got lazy and didnt upload this here for a whole month (whole thing last touched 5/2/23)
Like a lot of other courses on EDX, it is free to audit for a while. There are 3 other courses covering different sections, and together they make up the introductory program you would take had you actually attended Queens Australia. (or so they say)
I completed my notes up to around chapter 4 or so then got very lazy and didn't finish the rest. forgive me moms
I was going to post the videos here as well, since EDX lets you download them and I did so for them all before my access expired, but in total they come out to around 2GB so unless I find a good hosting service I probably will not. I think it is also on youtube as well (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRG9RdAejnIWF6lt3AtqeC7Ux-stOx___) but for whatever reason all of the videos are in some mixed order. They are all under the CC license I think.
There was a racism and prejudice module which I was worried about since I was anticipating meaningless pandering, but I was surprised to find they handled it well
I will post my tree output of the folder below + my notes + video dl links. Happy learning https://i.fii.moe/fmVF4lbxcjgt1Y0ykBq3phtBDn8aIkfp
4chanint Dutch synopsis (not the best, also includes some resources)
https://4chanint.fandom.com/wiki/Dutch
Dutch (Wikipedia)
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch_language
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch_language
dutchgrammar.com
https://www.dutchgrammar.com/
woordenlijst (spelling and syllables)
https://www.woordenlijst.org/
A Frequency Dictionary of Dutch
https://ankiweb.net/shared/info/1002891444
Dutch Mining Deck;
Make your own deck and add your own cards from unknown words you run into!
Dutch, Contact! nieuw 1 tekstboek and werkbook
not vetted, no opinion shared except for when i do share my opinion, some might not be the best, use what works for you and keep your mind open to that the method is probably flawed. it is better to get a mix of resources than to rely solely on one thing, cuz languages are so broad and different skills require different practice or context
and remember most importantly; if you dont use the language you wont learn it; dont get caught up in being a learner forever
Stephen Krashen on Second Language Acquisition (must watch!)
https://youtu.be/shgRN32ubag
https://youtu.be/Lbrr0A3j9gU
4chanint language wiki (i dont recommend following their stuff but they have good resources here and articles can be a good read at times) https://4chanint.fandom.com/wiki/The_Official_/int/_How_to_Learn_A_Foreign_Language_Guide_Wiki
4chan int board (its 4channy, but there are sometimes threads specific to certain languages which contain specific resources. /djl/ is a good example of this)
https://4chan.org/int
Anki (flashcard program)
https://apps.ankiweb.net/
This is what I did for languages I learnt/am learning:
Note that for you to become proficient in fields/skills you need to practice them; the steps here mainly focus on reading and listening. To get better at things like writing and speaking you will need to explicitly read and write and practice as such too.
https://itazuraneko.neocities.org/learn/guide/vocab_count.png