Taking notes is an important part of the life of every student. There are two main reasons why note-taking is important:
Good notes should be accurate, clear and concise. They should show the organisation of the text, and this should show the relationship between the ideas.
When you're reading, first survey the text to find the main points and how they are related. Then read for the subsidiary points; see how they are related to the main points and to each other. Then, reduce the points to notes. Make sure links and relationships between the ideas are shown.
Good notes need to be organised appropriately. There are two main methods for this:
The topic is summarised one point after another, using numbers and letters and indentation to organise information in order of importance. The numbers and letters can be used by themselves or in combination.
I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, X,
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I,
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,8,9,10,
(i), (ii), (iii), (iv), (v), (vi), (vii), (viii), (ix), (x),
a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i,
Or using decimals:
1.1, 1.2, 1.2.1, 1.2.2, 1.3, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3
For example:
|
|
|
A diagram of the information shows how the main ideas are related and reflects the organisation of the information. You can use flow charts, tree diagrams, diagrams, mind maps (Buzan, 1974) etc. You can also include circles, arrows, lines, boxes, etc.
Example 2, Example 3, Example 4, Example 5, Example 6
In both ways, you can use headings, underlining, colours, and white space to make the relationships clear. There is no generally best layout - it depends on what you like and your purpose. Some ways of taking notes are more appropriate for some topics. A description of a process suits a flow chart and a classification is shown clearly using a tree diagram. It is important to show how the ideas are the connected and how the information is organised.
Make sure you write down where your notes have been taken from. It will save you time when you need to check your facts or write a bibliography. In lecture notes, make sure you write down the name of anyone quoted and where the quote has been taken from. You can then find it if you want to make more detailed use of the information.
Try these exercise: Exercise 1, Exercise 2.
Notes are a summary and should therefore be much shorter than the original. Thus, abbreviations and symbols can be used whenever possible. The table below shows some conventional English symbols and abbreviations. You will need specific ones for your own subject.
and |
& |
and others (people) |
et. al. |
and other things |
etc. |
answer | A |
approximately |
, approx., c. |
at | @ |
because |
|
before example | : |
centimetre | cm |
century |
C |
chapter | ch. |
compare |
cf. |
correct | |
decreases, falls |
|
degrees |
� |
department | dept. |
divided by |
� |
east | E |
equal to |
= |
equivalent to |
|
especially |
esp. |
for example |
e.g. |
government | govt. |
greater than |
> |
grows, increases |
|
important |
N.B. |
in one year | p.a. |
information | info. |
kilogram | kg |
less than |
< |
maximum | max. |
minimum | min. |
minus |
- |
much greater than |
>> |
much less than |
<< |
multiplied by |
� |
north | N |
not come from | |
not equal |
|
not lead to | |
not proportional to |
|
number |
No. or # |
page | p. |
pages | pp. |
percent |
% |
plus |
+ |
possibly | poss. |
probably | prob. |
proportional to |
|
question | Q |
results from |
|
results in, leads to |
|
same as above | " |
similar to |
|
that is to say, in other words |
i.e. |
therefore |
|
south | S |
unlikely | ?? |
uncertain, not sure |
? |
very | v. |
with reference to |
re. |
wrong | X |
west | W |
year | yr. |