1 / 11

Marking up a Book

Marking up a Book. Christopher J. Middelhof MBA. Goals. Discuss importance of marking the text Compare effective and ineffective marking Develop a system for marking a text. Marking the Text. Steps: SQ3R without marking anything

anika
Télécharger la présentation

Marking up a Book

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Marking up a Book Christopher J. Middelhof MBA

  2. Goals • Discuss importance of marking the text • Compare effective and ineffective marking • Develop a system for marking a text

  3. Marking the Text • Steps: • SQ3R without marking anything • Box transitions: place a box around one word that signals a transition from one idea to another • Circle vocabulary: circle only the vocabulary word or phrase • Use the margin to mark MI for main idea or EX for example

  4. Marking the Text • Steps continued: • On every page mark the three whats • What is this about in three words or less • So what? Why do I care? Why do people with my major care? Why will this matter in another class? • Now what? How will I use this on the test, in a paper, in another class? • Write questions: in the margin place a ? If something in the line confuses you. Write a test questions about the paragraph.

  5. Your Turn • SQ3R the pages • Place a box around the words that signal a change in topic • Circle vocabulary words

  6. Your Turn • Print MI in the margin where appropriate • Print EX in the margin where appropriate • Write the three whats in the margin on one page • Pretend you are the instructor, write a great test question in the margin close to where the answer can be found.

  7. Marking the Text • Write a summary at the bottom of every third page. • Main idea • Examples of main idea • People, dates, places

  8. Highlighting • The Problem: an entire highlighted page means nothing • Colors can be distracting • No significance—doesn’t relate to test or other course or workplace

  9. Highlighting • Decide what highlighting means to you. • Only vocabulary • Only names and dates • Only test questions • Only answer to objectives at the front of the chapter • Limit yourself: highlight no more than three words in a row. No exceptions. • Imagine the dollar a highlight dilemma.

  10. Review • Steps: • SQ3R without marking anything • Box transitions: place a box around one word that signals a transition from one idea to another • On every page mark the threewhats • What is this about in three words or less • So what? Why do I care? Why do people with my major care? Why will this matter in another class? • Now what? How will I use this on the test, in a paper, in another class?

  11. Review • Decide what highlighting means to you. • Only vocabulary • Only names and dates • Only test questions • Only answers to objectives at the front of the chapter • Limit yourself: highlight no more than three words in a row. No exceptions. • Imagine the dollar a highlight dilemma

More Related