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Note Taking

Adequate notes are a necessary adjunct to efficient
study and learning in school or university. Think over the following suggestions and
improve your note- taking system where needed.
- Listen actively - if possible think
before you write - but don't get behind.
- Be open minded about points you
disagree on. Don't let arguing interfere with your note-taking.
- Raise questions if appropriate.
- Develop and use a standard method of
note-taking including punctuation, abbreviations, margins, etc.
- Take and keep notes in a large
notebook. The only merit to a small notebook is ease of carrying and that is
not your main objective. A large notebook allows you to adequately indent and
use an outline form.
- Leave a few spaces blank as you move
from one point to the next so that you can fill in additional points later if
necessary. Your objective is to take helpful notes, not to save paper.
- Do not try to take down everything
that the lecturer says. It is impossible in the first place and unnecessary in
the second place because not everything is of equal importance. Spend more
time listening and attempt to take down the main points. If you are writing as
fast as you can, you cannot be as discriminating a listener. There may be some
times, however, when it is more important to write than to think.
- Listen for cues as to important
points, transition form one point to the next, repetition of points for
emphasis, changes in voice inflections, enumeration of a series of points,
etc.
- Many lecturers attempt to present a
few major points and several minor points in a lecture. The rest is
explanatory material and samples. Try to see the main points and do not get
lost in a barrage of minor points which do not seem related to each other. The
relationship is there if you will listen for it. Be alert to cues about what
the professor thinks is important.
- Make your original notes legible
enough for your own reading, but use abbreviations of your own invention when
possible. The effort required to recopy notes can be better spent in rereading
them and thinking about them. Although neatness is a virtue in some respect,
it does not necessarily increase your learning.
- Copy down everything on the board,
regardless. Did you ever stop to think that every blackboard scribble may be a
clue to an exam item? You may not be able to integrate what is on the board
into your lecture notes, but if you copy it, it may serve as a useful clue for
you later. If not, what the heck -- you haven't wasted anything. You were in
the classroom anyway.
- Sit as close to the front of the
class, there are fewer distractions and it is easier to hear, see and attend
to important material.
- Get assignments and suggestions
precisely - ask questions if you're not sure.
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