0% found this document useful (0 votes)
19 views

Note Taking Tips

The document provides tips for effective note taking during lectures. It recommends being alert, orderly, systematic, and up to date when taking notes. Specific tips include attending lectures regularly, using a loose leaf notebook to organize notes by class, leaving space for information not understood, developing a numbering system, and reviewing notes within 5 minutes of the lecture. The tips are meant to help students focus during lectures and establish an organized note taking process for reviewing material.

Uploaded by

Swift36
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
19 views

Note Taking Tips

The document provides tips for effective note taking during lectures. It recommends being alert, orderly, systematic, and up to date when taking notes. Specific tips include attending lectures regularly, using a loose leaf notebook to organize notes by class, leaving space for information not understood, developing a numbering system, and reviewing notes within 5 minutes of the lecture. The tips are meant to help students focus during lectures and establish an organized note taking process for reviewing material.

Uploaded by

Swift36
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 2

ACADEMIC SKILLS CENTER

STUDY SKILLS LIBRARY

Note Taking Tips


Discussion
As you get involved with the complexities of note taking, you may tend to forget the simple things that
can make it a lot easier. These tips are little hints that we all know but sometimes forget. They can be
summarized by four directives:

1. Be Alert: so you are aware of and prepared for the lecture content and situation.
2. Be Orderly: so you can process the lecture now and for review later.
3. Be Systematic: so you can establish a habit and pattern so you won’t miss anything important.
4. Be Up To Date: so that your well designed note taking system gets done.

Below is a list of tips which may help you be alert, orderly, systematic, and up to date:

• Attend lectures regularly. Once you miss one, it will be easier to miss more.
• Use a standard 8 ½” x 11” loose leaf notebook, for continued organization and review. Spiral
notebooks do not allow reshuffling your notes for review.
• Keep the notes for one class separate from other classes. If possible, keep each class in a
separate binder.
• Write on one side of the paper for easier organization. It’s possible to overlook material written
on the back of a sheet.
• Leave your notebook at home and carry with you only enough pages to keep track of the lecture.
This way you won’t lose your entire set of notes should you misplace them.
• Carry extra pens and pencils for editing and unforeseen obstacles (UFO’s).
• Don’t doodle because it distracts. Keep eye contact when not writing.
• Make notes as complete as needed and as clear as possible so they can be used meaningfully
later.
• Leave blanks where information is missed or not understood. Fill in gaps after lecture or as soon
after as possible with the aid of the instructor or classmates.
• Develop your own system of enumerating and indenting.
• Use symbols such as asterisks for emphasis.
• Mark or separate assignments given in class in a space apart from the lecture notes.
• Separate your thoughts from those of the lecture; record your own items after the lecture.
• Be alert for cues, postural, visual, etc.
• Record examples where helpful.

• Listen especially at the end of the lecture. If the instructor has not paced his lecture well, he may
cram half of the content into the last 5 – 10 minutes.
• Get into the five-minute technique of reviewing your notes right after class. At this time you can
change, organize, add, delete, summarize, or clarify misunderstandings.
• Recopying by itself is a debatable advantage but the five-minute technique is not.
• Have study sessions once or twice a week to learn omissions, clear up misinterpretations and get
other students opinions about interpretations.

Bibliography
Deese, James and Ellin. How To Study, 3rd edition. New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc., 1979.

Johnson, Sue. The 4 T’s: Teacher/You, Text, Talk, Test - A Systematic Approach to Learning
Success. California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo

Pauk, Walter. How to Study in College, 2nd edition. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1974.

Raygor, Alton L. and David Wark. Systems for Study. New York: McGraw- Hill, Inc, 1970.

Embrace Your Unlimited Possibilities 2

You might also like