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Mastering Effective Note-Taking Techniques

This document provides guidance on effective note-taking. It discusses that note-taking is a skill that requires understanding what you are doing and practice. It also notes that note-taking from spoken language can be difficult due to its diffuse and ephemeral nature compared to written language. The document then provides tips for effective note-taking, including using the Cornell note-taking system and generating questions in the margins to aid review and studying. It emphasizes the importance of reviewing and reworking notes after class.

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Suresh Karki
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
21 views28 pages

Mastering Effective Note-Taking Techniques

This document provides guidance on effective note-taking. It discusses that note-taking is a skill that requires understanding what you are doing and practice. It also notes that note-taking from spoken language can be difficult due to its diffuse and ephemeral nature compared to written language. The document then provides tips for effective note-taking, including using the Cornell note-taking system and generating questions in the margins to aid review and studying. It emphasizes the importance of reviewing and reworking notes after class.

Uploaded by

Suresh Karki
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Effective

Note-Taking

Michael Frizell, Director


MichaelFrizell@[Link]
Plato & Note-Taking

“The act of
writing
something
down is
basically the
decision to
forget it.”
Pictured: Aristotle & Homer
Note Taking Is A Skill

• This takes
understanding
of what you're
doing
• It takes
practice, which
involves effort
Note Taking Is Difficult

• Spoken language is more


diffuse than written
• Speaker's organization is
not immediately apparent
• Immediate feedback
seldom occurs
• Spoken language is quick,
and does not 'exist' for long
– This makes analysis difficult
Four Purposes For Note Taking
• Provides a written record
for review
• Forces the listener to
pay attention
• Requires organization,
which involves active
effort on the part of the
listener
• Listener must condense
and rephrase, which aids
understanding
Physical Factors
• Seating
– Near the front and center
• Vision is better
• Hearing is better
– Avoid distractions
• Doorways, window
glare, etc.
• Peers
Physical Factors

• Materials
– Two pens
• Ink easier to read
• You have a reserve
– Wide-lined paper
– Conference/Meeting date,
and topic clearly labeled
• May use dividers
– Plenty of blank paper in
back
Before Taking Notes
• Prepare yourself mentally
– Be sure of your purpose and
the speaker's purpose
• They may not be the same
• Review your notes and
other background material
• Review your reading
assignment
– Reading should be done
BEFORE class
• Think through what has
happened in the class to
date
Before Taking Notes
• Generate enthusiasm and
interest
– Increased knowledge results in
increased interest
– A clear sense of purpose on your
part will make the course content
more relevant
– Acting as if you are interested can
help
– Don't let the personality or
mannerisms of a speaker put you
off
• What, not how, is important
Before Taking Notes

• Be ready to understand
and remember
• Anticipate what is to
come, and evaluate how
well you were able to do
this
– We learn from failure
Decide How Much You
Are Going To Do
• Are notes necessary?
– Don't be lulled into a sense
of security by an effective
presentation

• Hearing a thing once is


not enough. Memory
requires review and
understanding
While Taking Notes
• Don't try for a verbatim transcript
– Get all of the main ideas
– Record some details, illustrations,
implications, etc.
• Paraphrase
– But remember that the speaker
may serve as a model
• Integrate with other knowledge
you already have
– But don't allow preconceived
notions to distort what you are
hearing
• Use form to indicate relative
importance of items
– Underscore or star major points
• Leave plenty of white space for
later additions
While Taking Notes
• Note speaker's
organization of material
– Organization aids memory
– Organization indicates gaps
when they occur
• Be accurate
– Listen carefully to what is
being said
– Pay attention to qualifying
words like sometimes,
usually, rarely, etc.
– Notice signals that a change
of direction is coming but,
however, on the other hand
While Taking Notes
• Be an aggressive, not a
passive, listener
– Ask questions and discuss if it's
permitted
– If not, jot questions in your notes
– Seek out meanings.
– Develop a system of mechanics
• Jot down words or phrases, not
entire sentences
• Develop some system of
shorthand and be consistent in its
use
• Leave out small service words
• Use contractions and
abbreviations
• Use symbols +, =, &, @
After Taking Notes
• Review and reword them as soon
as possible
– You should consider this in scheduling
your work load
• Don't just recopy or type – think!
• " Reminiscing " may provide forgotten
material later
• Rewrite skimpy parts
• Fill in gaps as you remember points
• Arrange with another to compare notes
• Find answers to any questions
remaining unanswered
• Write a brief summary of the event
After Taking Notes
• Review and reword them as
soon as possible
– We forget 50% of what we hear
immediately;
– two months later, another 25% is
gone.
– Relearning is rapid if regular review
is used
– Compare the information with your
own experience
– Don't swallow everything uncritically
– Don't reject what seems strange or
incorrect. Check it out.
– Be willing to hold some seeming
inconsistencies in your mind over a
period of time
– Make meaningful associations
After Taking Notes

• Sharpen your note


taking technique by
looking at your
colleagues' notes.
– How are they better than
your own?
– How are your notes
superior?
• Practice those skills you
wish to develop
Cornell Note-Taking
Note just random thoughts!

• Note Taking Area


– make sure to leave large
spaces in your notes to add
information later!
• Summaries Area
– Write a brief summary of
that day's notes.
• Cue or Question Column
– write questions in the
margins
Cornell Note-Taking

• Record
• Reduce
• Recite
• Reflect
• Review
Example
of
Cornell
System
Cornell Note-Taking

• Questions in the
Margins:
– Cornell works best
by creating
potential test
questions in the
margins.
– Important! Always
use complete
questions.
Cornell Note-Taking
Summaries: May be paragraphs, or graphics like this:
Cornell Note-Taking:
Asking Questions
• Most students ask only:

– Who
– What
– When
– Where
– Why
– How

•Only works for fact-level questioning


Cornell Note-Taking:
Asking Questions
• Bloom’s
Taxonomy –
– 6 levels in the
cognitive domain
– Range from
simple fact recall
to complex
evaluation of
data
– Most student
only go as high
as Analysis.
Cornell Note-Taking:
Asking Questions
• Knowledge • Comprehension

Terms Uses implications


Facts Justifies concepts
Methods Verbal to Math skills
Procedures Charts / graphs
Concepts
Principles
Cornell Note-Taking:
Asking Questions
• Application • Analysis
Theory to practice Recognizes assumptions
Demonstration Recognizes poor logic
Rules to situation Distinguishes fact
Creating Charts/graphs Evaluates relevancy
Problem-solving. Analyzes structure.
Cornell Note-Taking:
Asking Questions
• Synthesis • Evaluation
Writes themes Consistency
Presents speeches Data support
Plans experiments Uses standards
Integrates information Sets Criteria
THANK YOU!

Michael Frizell,
Director

FOR MORE INFORMATION:


• MichaelFrizell@[Link]
• [Link]/writingcenter

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