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Effective Note-Taking

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Practice those skills you wish to develop Cornell Note-Taking ... Taking Notes After Taking Notes After Taking Notes After Taking Notes Cornell Note-Taking ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Effective Note-Taking


1
Effective Note-Taking
  • Michael Frizell, Director
  • MichaelFrizell_at_MissouriState.edu

2
Plato Note-Taking
  • The act of writing something down is basically
    the decision to forget it.
  • Pictured Aristotle Homer

3
Note Taking Is A Skill
  • This takes understanding of what you're doing
  • It takes practice, which involves effort

4
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

5
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

6
Physical Factors
  • Seating
  • Near the front and center
  • Vision is better
  • Hearing is better
  • Avoid distractions
  • Doorways, window glare, etc.
  • Peers

7
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

8
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

9
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

10
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

11
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

12
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

13
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

14
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 , , , _at_

15
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

16
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

17
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

18
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

19
Cornell Note-Taking
  • Record
  • Reduce
  • Recite
  • Reflect
  • Review

20
Example of Cornell System
21
Cornell Note-Taking
  • Questions in the Margins
  • Cornell works best by creating potential test
    questions in the margins.
  • Important! Always use complete questions.

22
Cornell Note-Taking
  • Summaries May be paragraphs, or graphics like
    this

23
Cornell Note-TakingAsking Questions
  • Most students ask only
  • Who
  • What
  • When
  • Where
  • Why
  • How
  • Only works for fact-level questioning

24
Cornell Note-TakingAsking Questions
  • Blooms 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.

25
Cornell Note-TakingAsking Questions
  • Comprehension
  • Uses implications
  • Justifies concepts
  • Verbal to Math skills
  • Charts / graphs
  • Knowledge
  • Terms
  • Facts
  • Methods
  • Procedures
  • Concepts
  • Principles

26
Cornell Note-TakingAsking Questions
  • Analysis
  • Recognizes assumptions
  • Recognizes poor logic
  • Distinguishes fact
  • Evaluates relevancy
  • Analyzes structure.
  • Application
  • Theory to practice
  • Demonstration
  • Rules to situation
  • Creating Charts/graphs
  • Problem-solving.

27
Cornell Note-TakingAsking Questions
  • Synthesis
  • Writes themes
  • Presents speeches
  • Plans experiments
  • Integrates information
  • Evaluation
  • Consistency
  • Data support
  • Uses standards
  • Sets Criteria

28
THANK YOU!
Michael Frizell, Director
  • FOR MORE INFORMATION
  • MichaelFrizell_at_MissouriState.edu
  • www.missouristate.edu/writingcenter
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