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Tips On Note Taking

The document provides tips and tools for improving student note-taking. It discusses how note-taking is an effective strategy for learning when done properly, but students often view it as tedious. The document recommends teaching students different note-taking techniques and formats, using technology tools for sketchnoting and collaboration, and highlighting exemplary student notes to improve student perception and skills with note-taking.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
77 views

Tips On Note Taking

The document provides tips and tools for improving student note-taking. It discusses how note-taking is an effective strategy for learning when done properly, but students often view it as tedious. The document recommends teaching students different note-taking techniques and formats, using technology tools for sketchnoting and collaboration, and highlighting exemplary student notes to improve student perception and skills with note-taking.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Tips & Tools to Improve Student Notetaking

Skills
by Curtis Chandler

I am a scribbler and a note-taker. Whether its a book I am reading, a visit to a colleagues


classroom, or a podcast that Im listening to, I tend to write a lot of things down.

I use notecards, sticky notes, apps on my phone, and even the back of my hand to record my
thoughts, insights, and questions. I do it because I know that no matter how interested I am in
what I am learning the human brain can only process and retain so much information.

Current research tells us that when done effectively, note-taking is an efficient, engaging strategy
for learners to process, organize, and transform information (Fryer, 2014; Hattie, 2012).

But in the classroom, rarely do our students get excited about taking notes. Instead, they view it
much like having to do pushups or running the mile during physical education a tedious,
uncomfortable process that must be endured but will eventually pass.

The good news is that with a few adjustments we can help students transform the painful process
of note-taking into a terrific tool for thinking. Below are a few tips and tech tools that can help
make it happen.

Note-taking: the first steps

When I was a brand new teacher, I mistakenly assumed that my students already knew how to
take good notes, instead of working with them to foster the attentiveness and skills they needed
to be successful at it.

After a few failed attempts, I was frustrated, and so were they. Now I realize that it takes time
and practice to become a good note-taker.
Source

In more recent years, I have encouraged my students to use a variety of note-taking techniques
that help them to record increasing amounts of information with accuracy. Together, we
experiment with different formats for notes and work at capturing information through
abbreviations, diagrams, and symbols.

We practice one approach at a time and discuss which tools/approaches work best in various
contexts and classes. Over time, students are encouraged to mashup different note-taking
approaches into a method that works well for them.

I have found it equally important to spend time with students on the cognitive skills required to
be an effective note-taker. The process starts with developing learners ability to analyze new
information, including how material is structured and how it is presented.

Teachers should also model and work with students to identify what information should be
deleted, substituted or kept (Dean & Marzano, 2013). The goal should be to move students away
from verbatim note-taking and memory storage, and instead, develop students ability to interpret
ideas, evaluate and synthesize information, and enhance our memory (Chang, 2015).

Spotlighting Student Notes

Many years ago, when I was a middle school student, one of my teachers used to put examples of
stellar work on the wall. It was her Wonderful Work Hall of Fame. As a squirrely, early-
adolescent boy, I tended to rush through my work and seldom turned it in on time. Not
surprisingly, it was quite rare that anything I completed ended up on the wall. But when it didI
was thrilled.
I have seen teachers that take a similar approach
with note-taking. They find opportunities to spotlight different students notes with a variety of
low-tech tools. In one classroom, I watched a teacher who reviewed each of his students notes
throughout the week.

Each day that notes were taken, a couple of students work was selected as the Neat Notes for
the day. The students work was then hung on a prestigious bulletin board with big letters that
read Neat Notes Hall of Fame until the end of the unit.

Other teachers seem to prefer to snap a quick picture of selected student notes and then upload
them to a class website that is easy to maintain using something like Weebly or Flickr. Doing so
seems to get students excited to have their work featured online and makes it possible for kids to
review each others notes when they get home from school or if they missed class.

Whether we use a wall in our classroom or a website, educators should work to model,
encourage, and highlight stellar student note-taking.

Sketch-noting: Get the Whole Brain Involved

As a kid, I remember being asked repeatedly to stop doodling while my teacher was presenting.
Now, as an educator, I know better. Drawing, concept mapping, and visual notetaking are all
ways to for students to use more of their brain to process and represent ideas through the use of
sketch-notes.

The process by which students to combine verbal and visual information is referred to as Dual
Coding Theory, and has proven effective in improving storage and recall of important
information (Pavio, 2014).

The process by which students to combine verbal and visual information is referred to as Dual
Coding Theory, and has proven effective in improving storage and recall of important
information (Pavio, 2014).
Functions of the Skin (7th grader) Source

While nearly every type of sketch-noting activity mentioned above can be accomplished with a
pencil and paper, a variety of technology tools exist to aid students and teachers in the process.
For iPads and other Apple devices, Paper by Fiftythree is a great way for beginners to combine
text, drawings, and pictures. Inkflow allows you to easily capture ideas and then resize and
reorganize them with your fingers. Both are free.

For those of us who want something that works on Apple and other devices, Sketchbook Express
is a nifty, fun, and intuitive drawing application for iPads, iPhones, and Android devices.

Free Tech Tools for Collaborative Note-taking

Teachers can also create opportunities for their students to engage in collaborative note-taking.
When students work together to identify and reflect upon key concepts, they learn from each
other and have a chance to refine their own ideas and understanding.

Google Docs and Google Slides are two fantastic tools for learners to collaborate in real time.
Each one makes it easy for students to combine verbal and visual information and to share it with
others. In addition, teachers will appreciate how easy it is to create and share a template with
their students format their notes.
TitanPad at Work

One of my favorite tools for collaborative note-taking is TitanPad. While it provides many of the
collaborative features offered by other tools, TitanPad uses a color-coding system to keep track
of individual student contributions. In this way, teachers are able to better gauge individual
contributions within the group.
Be Strategic about Teaching Notetaking

Most teachers would agree that it is important for learners to take good notes. Not all of us,
however, work strategically in the classroom to ensure that it happens.

I have heard it said thatAnything worth doing is worth doing well. Taking notes is no
exception. If we want to change our students perception of note-taking, we must help them to
understand, experience, and refine the process.

References

Chang, L. W. (2015). Investigating note-taking in consecutive interpreting? Using the concept of


visual grammar.

Dean, C. B., & Marzano, R. J. (2013). Classroom instruction that works: Research-based
strategies for increasing student achievement. Boston, Mass: Pearson Education.

Fryer, W. A. (2014). Visual Notetaking: show what you know with media (Mapping Media to
the Curriculum Book 5). Publications Archive of Wesley Fryer.

Hattie, J. (2012). Visible learning for teachers: Maximizing impact on learning. London:
Routledge.

Paivio, A. (2014). Intelligence, dual coding theory, and the brain. Intelligence, 47, 141-158.

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