 The main thing with research and assignments is to make sure you actually understand what the topic is or the question is that you're researching because you might go off onto quite a strange tangent if you've interpreted it in a different way. A tip that I would have for assignments would be to always look at the marking rubric as that's what your lecturer or marker would be using to mark against your work to see if you've met any of the learning criteria. I'll also check the unit outline as well to see if there's any extra information that the unit coordinator hasn't put in the rubric that's on the unit outline. For assignments, I feel that it's best if you actually check on when is the due date. So you can start planning because most of us, like most of the students, we have a lot of different undergraduates. So it's best to actually put it on a calendar and just make a reminder for your assignment so you don't have to like stuck in the situation where you only have like five days left or like just a week left and then you still have another assignment to go. So it's better like if you just start early as well and then check back on your calendar. Working on assignments, we say utilize all available resources. That's really the biggest tip I would give to anyone. Like a lot of students in a lot of units, they offer like some stages that students more than happy to look at your work for you. Give you feedback, you know, tell you where you could improve. Tell you if you're on the right track and everything like that. And a lot of people don't utilize that. Obviously, sometimes because it has to be your work has to be submitted considerably early and stuff like that. And a lot of people don't utilize that information. And I think that's a really helpful resource or a really helpful advantage that.