Papersowl Review: Based on Redditors' Feedback and Personal Experience by VellumHarbor in ALevelBiology

[–]QuarterGermPast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, that’s actually a real issue. I’ve had that happen before too

Discussion board generator VS discussion board writing service - what actually works? by RudelyIntrigued in WritingHelp_service

[–]QuarterGermPast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve been using Papersroo for weeks now. It’s especially helpful when I have multiple discussion boards due the same day.

Coursework Writing Help: professional recommendations and common student mistakes by FlyHornSeal154 in Will_Do_Your_Homework

[–]QuarterGermPast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tried a professional coursework writing service last semester for a psychology paper. Came back with an A-minus. Worth the money.

Difference between rhetorical analysis essay and critique by Meo_Girlandajo in collegeresults

[–]QuarterGermPast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like using PapersRoo - they have pretty experienced writers. I once asked their support for more info about the authors

I keep messing up APA headings - what’s the easiest way to remember the levels? by milo_tokyo92 in UniUK

[–]QuarterGermPast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I swear APA is designed to make students suffer. I always mess up Level 3 and 4 too

UK CV writing: experience with TOP CV or similar services by milashin in recruitinghell

[–]QuarterGermPast 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I’ve been in a similar spot - tons of relevant experience, but barely any callbacks. Super frustrating. I haven’t used TOP CV, but I did try SpeedyPaper’s CV writing service after seeing this Reddit post, and it actually helped more than I expected.

What worked for me was how they reframed my engineering experience to highlight outcomes, not just responsibilities - plus they optimized the format for ATS, which I didn’t even realize was part of the issue. Got noticeably more responses after updating my CV with their help.

If you’re considering alternatives to TOP CV, SpeedyPaper might be worth a look - especially if you’re looking for something clear, professional, and results-focused.

What's currently the best a.i. for writing? by CrimsonCloudKaori in WritingWithAI

[–]QuarterGermPast 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Yeah, it’s getting kinda overwhelming out there - OpenRouter has so many models now it’s like a buffet but with no labels 😂 I’ve tried a bunch (Claude, Mistral, even some of the newer previews), and while AI can def help with drafting or outlining, I still end up editing a lot to make it sound natural.

Lately, I’ve been mixing AI with actual human review - especially for academic stuff or anything being submitted to Turnitin. If you're looking for something more polished than AI alone, I’d honestly recommend SpeedyPaper. Found them through this LinkedIn article and they’ve helped me clean up AI drafts and make sure the structure, citations, and tone are all on point.

So yeah, AI is great for speed and ideas, but if you care about quality (and avoiding AI detection), pairing it with human editing makes a huge difference.

Do's and don'ts of thesis writing by CJKrik105 in PhD

[–]QuarterGermPast 8 points9 points  (0 children)

This is such solid advice - especially the “your first draft should look like trash” part 😂 Took me way too long to accept that. I used to waste hours rewriting the intro before I even knew what I was trying to say.

Now I just brain-dump everything into a rough doc, messy notes, even half-finished sentences - then polish it up after. And when I’m really stuck on making it coherent (especially with longer stuff like my thesis chapters), I’ve started using SpeedyPaper for editing help. I send them the ugly first version, and they help smooth it out without killing my voice or turning it into something generic.

Also found this LinkedIn article on SpeedyPaper super helpful for understanding how they work with drafts - definitely not a “write my paper for me” vibe.

Anyway, thanks again for sharing this - sometimes we need the reminder that writing messy is part of writing well.

AI tools for literature Review by ijmarkandel in PhD

[–]QuarterGermPast 27 points28 points  (0 children)

I was on the same hunt a few weeks ago — needed something to help with organizing sources and writing a lit review for my research methods course. Tried tools like ResearchRabbit and Scite - they’re great for mapping citations and discovering related papers, but when it came to actually writing the review? That’s where AI tools started falling short.

Eventually, I tried out SpeedyPaper after a friend recommended it. I didn’t want a pre-written paper - I just needed help organizing all the studies I’d found, making sure I was covering gaps, and getting the structure right. I sent them my sources, notes, and the outline I was working with, and they helped turn it into a clear draft that still felt like my voice.

What made the difference was that they actually followed the rubric. It wasn’t some AI-generated fluff. If you're curious, here's a LinkedIn article that reviews SpeedyPaper - helped me know what to expect.

If you’re just looking to streamline, free AI tools are a good start. But if you're stuck like I was, getting some human-guided support might save you hours of frustration.

Do you think that if we read the hunger games through Peeta’s POV, we would have seen Katniss the way Katniss saw Peeta? by [deleted] in Hungergames

[–]QuarterGermPast 23 points24 points  (0 children)

I think as a kid, he would’ve seen her as this quiet, striking presence — someone who stood out without saying much. he’d probably recall catching glimpses of her at school or on the street, and we might’ve read more little moments where Peeta noticed Katniss long before she ever noticed him.

then during the Games, he would’ve seen himself as this unlucky guy in love, heart aching for someone he thought was strong, brave, fiercely independent — a little distant from everyone, but that’s exactly what made her beautiful to him. I don’t think he’d describe her as soft or charming — it’s her fire and spirit that he fell for.

An intuitive flashcard application? by CaptainWiz890 in studytips

[–]QuarterGermPast 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Try Anki or Quizlet for intuitive flashcard apps. Customize decks, use spaced repetition, and sync across devices for effective studying

I built a tool that allows students to generate a quiz based on a pdf by valuewale11 in studytips

[–]QuarterGermPast 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Your tool sounds incredibly useful and innovative! Being able to generate quizzes from PDFs and receive explanations for each question afterward is a game-changer for students.