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Published byColeen Jefferson Modified over 9 years ago
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Note Taking Doing the work to remember what you read later
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Note-Taking Why take notes? Activates your brain—active reading Info into working memory = long term memory Good for studying later Can use for essays, homework, etc
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Note-Taking How do you take notes? KWL—What you know (pre-reading) What you want to know (comp.) What you learned Bullet—brief nuggets of information Outline—organizing ideas how they relate Post-it—Questions, Answers, Comments, Summary Cornell—term, information, where to find it in the book
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KWL KWL is great for subjects like history and science where ideas can build off each other Gets your brain ready to take in information and learn
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Bulleted Notes Bulleted notes are like a list—there is no order of importance/ relation to the ideas Great for lecture notes Subject Summary of point Comments Information Vocabulary Ideas/Concepts New Information Related information
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Outline Shows main points and relating details Great for History Helpful as first step in writing essays/ research papers
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Post-It Note-Taking Great for English texts & Lit. books Post-its can be put on regular paper or re- copied after chapter is read Color coded helps some people— memory trick
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Cornell Notes Great for Math, Science, History, and English novels Concepts are together on page Great for vocabulary
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What do you need for all? For all of these formats, the ability to summarize something is important. Summarizing means to take a lot of information and write it down using only the essential bits that keep the same meaning as the original.
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