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Taking Effective Notes in Class

Taking Effective Notes in Class. If you need to remember something for class: Write it down Review it Organize it Keep it handy Stay on top of your notes!. To Process Information Efficiently. Commit yourself to do your best work.

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Taking Effective Notes in Class

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  1. Taking Effective Notes in Class • If you need to remember something for class: • Write it down • Review it • Organize it • Keep it handy • Stay on top of your notes!

  2. To Process Information Efficiently • Commityourself to do your best work. • Concentrate to eliminate distractions and focus on the material. • Connect new ideas to what you already know. • Capture critical information with your pencil or pen.

  3. Commit to the Class & the Work Involved • Be psychologically ready to learn. • Arrive a few minutes early and review your notes and previous reading assignment. • Identify areas that are difficult to understand. • Develop questions that will help you clarify challenging aspects of the material. • Be on time: instructors often review during the first few minutes of class.

  4. Concentrate on the Material • Keep your mind on-task. • “Clock-In”, this is your job. • Be aware of distractions & don’t let them have you. • Talking to others --“off-task” • Daydreaming & doodling • The Right Attitude • STAY FOCUSED!

  5. Connect Ideas • Paraphrase what you hear • Relate key ideas to what you already know • Make a note of unknown words…and Follow-up • Make new ideas into connected ones

  6. Capture Key Ideas and Listen Actively • Identify key words, themes, and main points • Recognize organizational patterns in the lecture • Relate details to the main point • Listen for clues – Important Test ?’s • Take ownership of the information

  7. Choose the Note-Taking Method that’s right for you… • The Cornell System • Outlining • Summary Method • Concept Maps • Fishbone Diagram

  8. The Cornell System Main Notes • Divide your notepaper by drawing a • vertical line 2 inches from the left margin. • On the right side, take your notes from class. • On the left side, write • key words • questions • comments • Examples • On the bottom, write a summary • These will make your work easier to review later. • Test yourself by looking at comments on the left and identifying the lecture material on the right. Key Words Questions Comments Examples The Cornell System groups is good at separating your notes from your questions and observations, and it encourages critical thinking! Summary

  9. Formal Outline Outlining • This is easy to do with a well-organized lecture, otherwise you may have to work a little harder. • Use headings and subheadings followed by course material. • Your results will be neat, easy to follow notes, providing a clear picture of the information. Informal Outline

  10. Summary Method • Monitor the lecture for critical ideas. • Pause to create your own summary of what has been presented. • This method will force you to determine what is important and how information is related to the topics presented. • This is an especially effective method for dealing with a disorganized lecture. No, we’d better summarize! Did you get that?

  11. The Concept Map Regular sleep (6-8 hours) Get rest Good listeners in classroom lecture Sit near front Legible Avoid distraction Take notes Eat Breakfast Summarize Thus provides visual cues about how ideas are related. It is very effective after class, putting your notes in a more visual format.

  12. Fishbone Diagram • The problem or outcome is printed in the head of the “fish”. • Identify the primary factors and connect them like ribs to the backbone of the fish • Elaborate each rib with the details related to each primary factor.

  13. Other Note-Taking Tips • Don’t erase mistakes, line through it. • Learn common abbreviations. (Abbrev.) • Avoid writing things down that you don’t understand. • Instead, ask questions when you don’t understand. • Review your notes often. • Think and record information in pictures and diagrams if you are visual.

  14. Short-Term Memory: Listening and Forgetting • Most forgetting takes place 24 hours after you see or hear something! • If you don’t review after class, you may have forgotten up to 70% of the material.

  15. One Minute Paper • Take out a piece of paper and write for about one minute: • What were the main topics covered today? • What questions do you still have after today?

  16. Journal Prompt In regards to Note-Taking, consider the following: • What is your current method for taking notes in class? • What is your reaction to the suggestions about taking notes for class? • Which ideas will you implement in your note-taking strategies? • Why? • Do you think they will have the potential to help you earn better grades? • Why? • Please focus on answering the "Why?", as this is the most important in how the course material relates to YOU.

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