Note Taking
Note Taking
Note Taking
NOTETAKING
• The practice of writing down or otherwise recording key
points of information. (about.com)
• Read the title and the abstract or preface (if there is one)
• Read the introduction or first paragraph
• Skim the text to read topic headings and notice how the text
is organized
• Read graphic material and predict its purpose in the text
3. IDENTIFY HOW INFORMATION IS
ORGANIZED
ORGANISING PRINCIPLES:
• Past ideas to present ideas
• The steps or stages of a process or event
• Most important point to least important point
• Well known ideas to least known ideas
• Simple ideas to complex ideas
3. IDENTIFY HOW INFORMATION IS
ORGANIZED
ORGANISING PRINCIPLES:
Sample Notes:
Revolution - occurrence that affects other aspects
of life: e.g., econ., socl., etc. C.f. text, pp. 29-30
THE SENTENCE METHOD
Example 2:
Melville did not try to represent life as it really was.
The language of Ahab, Starbuck, and Ishmael, for
instance, was not that of real life.
Sample Notes:
Mel didn't repr. life as was; e.g., lang. of Ahab, etc.
not of real life.
THE SENTENCE METHOD
Example 3:
At first, Freud tried conventional, physical methods of
treatment such as giving baths, massages, rest cures, and
similar aids. But when these failed, he tried techniques of
hypnosis that he had seen used by Jean-Martin Charcot. Finally,
he borrowed an idea from Jean Breuer and used direct verbal
communication to get an unhypnotized patient to reveal
unconscious thoughts.
Sample Notes:
Freud 1st -- used phys. trtment; e.g., baths, etc. This fld. 2nd --
used hypnosis (fr. Charcot) Finally -- used dirct vrb. commun.
(fr. Breuer) - got unhynop, patnt to reveal uncons. thoughts.
REFERENCES:
• Deese, James and Ellin K. Deese. How To Study (3rd ed). 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 Ed). Boston: Houghton
Mifflin Co., 1974.
• Raygor, Alton L. and David Wark. Systems For Study. New York:
McGraw- Hill, Inc, 1970.