Q: Decorate your diary with words or drawings in any way you like. Use pencils, pens, or markers to decorate both the cover and inner pages with your own designs.  Try writing “My Diary,” your name, or another appropriate title on the front cover of your diary. You can also write “This diary belongs to:” on the first page and put down your name below it. Add page numbers, boarders, or other doodles on the corners and edges of your inner pages, leaving plenty of room in the middle of the pages for the writing entries you will do later. Note that this is an easy step to convert a plain notebook that you already have into a special diary. Draw shapes and letters with stencils, add colorful paper, or stick on your favorite stickers to your diary to make it more unique. Decorate both the cover and the inner pages with whatever elements you like.  Try writing a title on the cover of your diary with crisp lettering using a stencil. You can even create your own custom stencil online for any words or font you want.  Easily create cover art that you love by cutting a piece of colored or patterned fabric or paper slightly larger than the cover of your diary. Then fold the material over the edges of the cover and glue in place with adhesive meant for paper or fabric, depending on what material you use. Glue a printed photo or your own artwork to the cover of your diary for a personal touch. You can even add a sheet of sticky laminating paper over the page you decorate in order to protect the art.  Add a photo to your diary cover that illustrates the theme of your diary, if you have one. For example, you could attach a photo of your family or friends if you plan to write a lot about them, or a photo of a vacation locale for a diary all about your summer vacation. Create a collage of your own photos and artwork, or find images and art in magazines or other print sources that you or others don’t mind cutting up and gluing.
A: Draw freeform lettering or designs. Use stickers, paper, or stencils. Add photos and artwork.

Q: Pick cuts such as chuck, brisket, and flank steaks since they are usually harder to chew than other cuts of meat. Avoid using beer on meat that’s already light or tender, such as steak fillets, since the beer could overpower the flavor. If the meat was frozen, make sure you thaw it completely before you put it in your beer brine.   Try beer brine on chicken to give the outside a more caramelized crust. You can also tenderize whole chickens or turkeys if you make enough beer brine to submerge them. Rip off a sheet of plastic cling wrap that’s large enough to go over the bowl. Press the wrap onto the rim of the bowl to seal it so it doesn’t get contaminated. If your bowl has a lid, make sure it forms a tight seal so bacteria can’t get inside. Set the beer brine and meat in your fridge so it can chill and infuse the flavors. Make sure the lid stays on securely or the plastic wrap seals the bowl completely. You can tenderize the meat in the beer brine for up to 12 hours so the juices soak into the meat and make it feel more tender.  Start your beer brine in the morning so you can tenderize your meat and have it for dinner. If you leave the meat in the brine for too long, the meat may get too soft and make it harder to cook.
A: Choose a tough cut of thawed meat you want to tenderize. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap or a lid to seal it. Keep the bowl in your fridge for up to 12 hours.

Q: Though application requirements may vary by school, there are common documents you can expect to need, including:  An updated resume. Make sure your resume reflects your most recent education, awards, and activities and that it’s completely error-free. Remove any old or irrelevant information. For details on writing your resume, see How to Write a Resume. A cover letter. Your cover letter should be specific to each job and should discuss your interest in and qualification for the specific job to which you’re applying. For more information on writing a cover letter, see How to Write a Cover Letter. A teaching statement. Your teaching statement should state your goals, reasons for pursuing teaching, teaching/pedagogical philosophy, teaching methodology, and goals. A teaching statement should identify your teaching interests and goals, concrete examples of how you have and will accomplish those goals, discuss with specific examples issues you’ve faced and resolved in the classroom, which courses you’re interested in teaching, and strong and supportive statements from student evaluations, if available. References. Many job postings will want you to include a list of references; your reference list should provide the name and contact information of professionals who know your work well and can offer you a positive recommendation. Be sure to ask each reference if you may list them before doing so. When you’ve found a job to which you plan to apply, read the application and its requirements carefully and fulfill them exactly.  Be sure you meet all of the qualifications and that you submit all of your materials by the deadline. Keep a careful record of the jobs to which you’ve applied and the responses you’ve received to avoid applying to the same job twice or forgetting where you applied if you get a request for an interview or for more information.
A:
Prepare your application documents. Follow the job application instructions exactly.