50 ‘Cool Guides’ People Shared On This Group That Contain Information They Don’t Teach At School
InterviewOne of my secret pleasures (and feel free to chime in if you’re a geek like me) is looking through various colorful guides and infographics, from what plants are edible in forests to hypothetical explanations on how best to survive the zombie Apocalypse that 2020 promised but never delivered.
The multi-million-member ‘Cool Guides’ community on Reddit is the prime place to go to for (yup, you guessed it!) cool guides. From aesthetically pleasing and very informative ones to quirky and funny ones, you’ll find a bit of everything to keep those noggins of yours learning and yearning for more, dear Pandas.
Bored Panda had a lovely chat with redditor Dadschool, who founded the r/coolguides subreddit way back in 2014 and is still its head moderator to this very day. Having started the sub with no real expectations of forming a community around it, he filled a niche on Reddit that had been empty. "I had a bit of a compulsive habit of saving every guide I came across on Reddit with the idea that I'd somehow reference it when I needed it later. There weren't really any subs for general guides so I made one and uploaded all my guides at once. I think a lot of people have a similar affection for bitesize trivia and hoarding generalist knowledge." You'll find the rest of our interview with the founder below.
Upvote your fave guides as you scroll on down, drop us a comment with your thoughts below, and go and join the r/coolguides subreddit if it’s right up your alley. But a quick note of warning before we begin: this is a community mostly for guides; infographics are in a bit of a grey area.
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Inequality V. Equality V. Equity V. Justice
Hand Sign Guide For Loud Bars
A More Comprehensive Guide To Symptoms Of Depression
The founder, Dadschool, was very humble about his role in expanding the community. "I can say it is only able to be this size because moderators like @etymologynerd and @robinsparkles18 are as active as they are, and the time they take out of their day to check in," he praised his colleagues. With a leader so supportive, no wonder that the mod r/coolguides mod team stands shoulder to shoulder, come hell or high water.
"The unique thing about Reddit is that subreddits really are independent and are autonomously moderated communities. I think our subscriber ranking is something like 190 across all of Reddit and it's not like there's monetization options after you break 200 or conversations with Reddit corporate. We're the same mod team we were a few years ago, excited that we broke 100k, and checking Reddit throughout the day to make sure no one uploaded the same damn apple guide uploaded 100 times that week," the founder claimed that things are still pretty much as they've always been.
Recognizing A Mentally Abused Brain
How To Get A Scientific Paper For Free
How Paint Can Change A Room
Dadschool revealed that the biggest challenge that he and the other moderators face is reacting in time to remove hateful and troll guides as soon as humanly possible. However, that's not always possible because they all have day jobs; moderating is something that they do during their spare time. "We all are working professionals so it's easy for something to slip by and stay out there for way longer than it should and that's always a total bummer—a total lose/lose for the community."
How To Recognize The Artists Of Paintings
How Masks And Social Distancing Works
Geography Terms
Nowadays, the founder of r/coolguides is a tad more lax about infographics than when he first founded the subreddit. These days, he's more keen to let the community decide what direction it wants to go via upvotes and engagement. He trusts the community. "I see the moderator role as more akin to a landscaper: pruning [troll] posts, removing harmful posts, and moderating for content diversity. Subscribers are much better judges of content quality and validity than moderators and I think it's important to trust them in that role." He added (and this is a feeling that I completely agree with): "I will admit, however, that the majority of guides I enjoy most myself rarely break 50/100 upvotes."
I Think These Simple Points Could Help A Lot.
Number 10 should be higher. Kids don't respect adults who are unable to aknowledge their mistakes.
Absolutely. And kids won't learn the skill of a good apology when it is needed.
Load More Replies...Thank you so much. Every time I introduce a story or wanna talk about something, my family (everyone who I'm trying to talk to at the moment, actually) totally disregards me and interrupts with a different topic. Happened just last night when my sister was visiting. I was about to say something that I'd come across on BP, and literally while I was speaking, my sister (who is 10 years older than me, not just a little kid trying to get attention) managed to say a few words and divert everyone's attention to her as she talked about something totally unrelated. This happens the majority of the time I try to tell even a short story or make a comment on something with them. I even confronted them of this by saying "I feel disregarded," and my mom just looked at me with an unfathomable expression, then turned and continued listening to what my sister had to say. :/
That's just wow, perhaps get up and leave? If they won't listen to you, why should you bother listening to them?
Load More Replies...Even just doing number ten would be an amazing start I wish my dad could see this
say "I don't know, let's find it out together" instead of random bullshitting
• Lemønchu • Sus. What are you doing here reading our secret parenting tips?
Load More Replies...Worked for me, especially #10!! When your kids realize that their parents also make mistakes, but apologize when they do, they learn how to be Responsible People!
That's kind of creepy... when I think that a random person wants to build up a relationship to a random kid...
I know the last thing I wanted to have to answer every day was, "How was school?"...and yet Mother kept trying. And apologize?? Hah. I can't recall either of my parents apologizing to me for anything or saying "I was wrong" throughout my youth (they were good people, just clueless about child psychology). I suspect it had to do with the 1950s/60s idea that parents were authority figures, not your "friend." (My dad actually said that once. He didn't believe parents should be your friend.) Fortunately, better parenting methods have arisen since then. Now, if only all parents would follow them.
When my daughter is dancing in front of the mirror i stand behind her and imitates her movements, she loves it!
ALWAYS LISTEN even if you feel its not important. Ages 5-8 of my son I learned EVERYTHING ABOUT pokemon, I can repeat stats back to him. I know A LOT about Minecraft (which is the one video games I don't like) but I know what a Creeper is vs an Endermen. I make mistakes, I say sorry when I get stressed and yell, we talk. It's so important to just listen. Is really not that hard. Wish like hell my folks had done that.
What a surprise, no grown up has ever 1. Talk to me about anything other than school 2.Let me teach them about my interests 3.Probably never remembered anything about my life 4.Told me about their life 5. Engage in activities with me 6. Tell hilarious of embarrassing stories to me 7. Share inspirational stories 8. Done anything crazy 9. Use my interests in my lessons or activities or 10. Apologize when they mess up. Specifically 10. Never, EVER heard an adult say " I'm sorry " when they are wrong
And my mother did absolutely **ZERO** of these things!! Except #6 - told them to everyone about ME. You know, keep me humble - ensure everyone puts me down juuuuust like she does.
Someone should have showed this to my dad. He did none of these, but they would have helped.
Listen to them when they want to talk and when listening give them your full attention. Try saying yes instead of no sometimes, it’s easy to get into the habit of saying no, but think about what they’re asking.
In other words, pretty much the same way you build up relationships with anyone...
I feel like most of these are universally true, even when you want to build relationships as adults (switch "school" for "work" in #1 and we are there).
I’d show this to my mom but it would turn into a lecture about how I’m not focusing in class
Me, after school: h-. My parents: did you ask the teacher about the extra credit assignment? can you ask your friends what career they want? You have to study today.
Wow! My dad really was a deadbeat! He didn't do a single one of these.
I thought you just had to buy them everything they want and bully their teachers....
No wonder my kid turned out so great! I hit all 10 of those bad boys!
Sad. Maybe you could try these tips on him and see what happens. I would love to know. Dad's are really hard to know, in my experience.
Load More Replies...Just A Little Something For The Upcoming Holiday Season
A Restaurant Guide For How You Want Your Steak Cooked
How about let people eat steak how they like it. The chef can shove the rare steak where the sun don’t shine.
For those of you Pandas who are raring to post a guide on r/coolguides, head moderator Dadschool is all for it: "Go for it!" Just remember to avoid reposts, so have a look through the newest posts. "We do try to maintain some content diversity, so don't upload all ten of your favorite ab workout guides at once. If you have the source, be a buddy and list that too in the comments or title to give credit where it's due!" he gave some advice for newcomers.
Paper Snowflakes
I'm so bad at crafting, mine would probably end up being just confetti :/
I Liked This One
The niqab and the burka should not be legal in our society. First because the face is the way of conveying emotions and covering it it’s dehumanising but specially for security. The other veils should be all legal for adults but not for kids since they cannot consent to them. I am heartbroken each time that I see a 8yo covered like if she needs to be hidden while her brothers run around freely.
Animals With Misleading Names
The University of Bath has some excellent advice on how to create a proper guide that’s useful for your readers. Yes, it's a guide for creating guides: we're officially in meta-territory now.
They suggest that you address the reader directly, rather than in the third person (i.e. ‘you Pandas should upvote this awesome article’ instead of ‘Pandas may upvote this absolutely amazing article at the very bottom of the page’).
Different Shades Of Light
How To Email Well
Guide To Pain Scale
What’s more, you should aim to write concisely. Plainly. Simply. Structure and break up the content to make it easier to read. Give your guide some flow and make it easy for the reader to understand what’s what.
Meanwhile, some of the things that you should avoid are incredibly technical terms in the title and headings. Also, omit useless words and info. Less. Is. More. (Unless you absolutely have to add in those extra words for whatever unavoidable reasons.)
How Untreated Adhd Causes And Traps You In Depression
The History Of Confederate Flags.
In the age of cancel culture, I'm astonished that nobody's gotten to the Dukes of Hazard yet. 🤔
How To Treat People With Dementia
The ‘Cool Guides’ subreddit celebrated its 7th birthday, a magical milestone if there ever was one, just over a week ago on March 20.
Since having been founded in 2014, the community now has nearly 2.1 million members and continues to grow. Despite the vast number of members, the team of moderators remains compact, numbering at just 5 (as far as we can tell from their page on Reddit—there may be more who choose to remain more mysterious and secretive).
Cool Guide Of Words You Can Use Instead Of Very
And please avoid using very twice or more in a row : very very very ...
Types Of Asian Architecture
Tattoo Pain Chart
According to the mods, their online page is for “picture based reference guides for anything and everything. If it seems like something someone might print, physically post, and reference then it is a good link for this sub.”
However, this doesn’t always include infographics. The mods explain that infographics are learning tools, whereas guides are reference tools. Sometimes, the area between the two becomes blurred.
If you do end up posting what the mods deem to be an infographic, they might decide to remove it. “An infographic is more educational in layout and content, finding something specific on an infographic is not as easy because it is designed to inform through more narrative structures. If your guide is more of a visual essay than a structured table or list, then chances are that is an infographic. Sometimes infographics can masquerade as how-to guides.”
How Human Flesh Decomposes
U.S. Flag But Each Star Is Scaled Proportionally To Their State’s Population, In Roughly It’s Geographical Position.
Cool Idea Of How Fresh New Babies See The World
The subreddit also has a no-tolerance policy for any content that’s dangerous, harmful, hurtful, or destructive. It’s supposed to be a wholesome and informative community that adheres to morality, the rules of Reddit, as well as common legal structures.
“Guides depicting harmful, dangerous, or destructive content will be removed. This includes guides describing the creation of dangerous items/materials and/or guides that are designed with the purpose to harm or hurt others do not fit the culture of this sub and will be removed.”
A Simple Spell
For All You Dog Lovers Out There
From The Us Holocaust Museum
So, dear Pandas, which of these guides did you find to be the most useful (or, let's face it, the most intriguing because we all like looking at pretty pictures)? What's the most useful guide you've ever seen in your entire life? Is there a guide for something that you'd do pretty much anything to read through? Share your thoughts with everyone else below.
How To Assert Dominance Over A Waterfall
I hope I never have to come to a point where I would need this information
Activities That Make Your Brain Release Happy Chemicals
How Gerrymandering Works
How To Turn Down An Invite.
First you decline, then be gracious. Wording is very essential and people tend to pay attention to the sentence after the "but". For example "I won't be able to make it, but thank you for considering me" vs "thank you for inviting me, but I can't come". I think the first one sounds better, even if it's essentially the same.
Marginal Tax
Copper Through The Patina Process
Communication 101: As A Ux Researcher, I Study How People Understand Technology, Content, And Messaging For A Living. During This Crisis, Vague Messages Like "Practice Social Distancing" Will Have Far Less Impact Than Concrete, Specific Messages Like "Stay At Home. Get Groceries Once Per Week"
When Coming In Contact With A Bear
How To Pack A Hiking Bag
This is very helpful because I go hiking a lot, next time I will pack this way!
Apples On A Scale From Most Tart To Most Sweet
What To Say To Kids Instead Of “Be Careful!”
Sometimes it is just quicker to say be careful when in/near a dangerous situation.
Biking Or Running In The Dark? Here's How The Drivers See You Based On The Clothes You Wear.
I’ll Never Remember This Mid-Heart Attack But This Is Good To Know
A Quick Guide To Tea!
Sorry... green tea is tea, but the rest of them are types of infusions/tisanes.
Explanation Of The Subtle Differences Between Equality And Equity
In all three scenarios the soccer players are robbed of gate receipts
Five Demands, Not One Less. End Police Brutality
Simple Guide To Staying Healthy
Different Forms Of Color Blindness
How To Make An Amazing Sofa Fort
The Joker
I really loved this one. Informative and relevant. I would love to read more of these.
thnaks, this was a very informative and interesting post!! more of these, please
You mean, a site consists of mostly left wing political people, and the site accommodates for that? OH NO GUYS BILL GATES IS AFTER OUR PICKLE! BIG SCARY AHHHH
Load More Replies...I really loved this one. Informative and relevant. I would love to read more of these.
thnaks, this was a very informative and interesting post!! more of these, please
You mean, a site consists of mostly left wing political people, and the site accommodates for that? OH NO GUYS BILL GATES IS AFTER OUR PICKLE! BIG SCARY AHHHH
Load More Replies...