SSLG102 - Lecture 6 - Effective Note-Taking and Summarizing
SSLG102 - Lecture 6 - Effective Note-Taking and Summarizing
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Essential readings
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Today’s Lecture
I. Effective Note-taking
II. Summarizing
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I - EFFECTIVE
NOTE - TAKING
1. Why do I need to take notes?
2. What should I include in my notes?
3. Note taking techniques
4. Note-taking layouts
5. Top tips for note-taking
6. Digital notes
I. Why do I need to take notes?
• Effective note-taking skills help you to record, organize and
process your thoughts on what you have read/listened. As you
begin to carry out more in-depth reading/listening on a subject,
writing comprehensive notes will save you valuable study time.
• Being a successful note-taker helps you to:
– maintain focus and stay organized
– process and recall information
– review and revise what you have read and learned
– put your ideas into your own words
– actively engage with what you are reading
– make links to other reading and research
– analyze and apply critical thinking to your reading
– highlight areas for further development.
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2. What should I include in my notes?
• Activity 1:
– What should be included in your notes when you attend a lecture
or read a material?
– Share your ideas on Menti.com
• www.menti.com
• Code: 4748 7320
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2. What should I include in my notes?
(cont.)
RELEVANCE • Anything important and directly relevant to the question you are
trying to answer or the main topic.
UNCERTAINTY • Things you find difficult to understand, so that you can go back
to them later.
QUESTIONS • Questions that the reading raises in your mind. There may be
some things that you need to find more information on.
QUOTES • Significant quotes, note direct quotes and where you found
them, so you can correctly cite them later.
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3. Note-taking techniques
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a. Linear notes
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b. Visual notes
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b. Visual notes (cont.)
• Mind mapping:
– Watch the following video to discover the benefits of mind mapping.
– Link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=brTMbPyhZY0&feature=emb_title
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c. Tips for note-taking techniques
• Highlighting and annotations
– It can be helpful to add comments to the
text you are reading by writing notes in the
margin or on sticky notes.
– You may also want to highlight key words to
identify important information relevant to
your topic. However, make sure you don’t
write in books that don’t belong to you.
– Some students highlight too much, defeating
the purpose of picking out the key
information. Try to take notes at short
intervals when reading to help you to
more actively engage with the material and
process the information more effectively.
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c. Tips for note-taking techniques (cont.)
• Paraphrasing and summaries
– It is essential to write your notes in your own words as this helps to make sense of
ideas and information.
– Copying text exactly does not allow you to process the concept; it can often take
longer and may lead to accidental plagiarism, which is taking someone else’s words
or ideas and claiming them as your own.
– Watch this video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZB97edBdNvk) to know more
about plagiarism.
– Summarizing helps you to focus on the main points of the reading material.
à When you complete a section of notes, try and summarize them in your own words.
à Better understanding and very useful as a revision aid.
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c. Tips for note-taking techniques (cont.)
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c. Tips for note-taking techniques (cont.)
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4. Note taking layouts
There are several different note-taking layouts to suit
different purposes. It is a good idea to try out different ones
to see which best suits your needs. Here are some of these
methods.
a. The Cornell Method
b. The Mapping Method
c. The Outlining Method
d. The Charting Method
e. The Sentence Method
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a. The Cornell Method
• This method is good for understanding key ideas and relationships
and helps to organize your notes into small summaries which are
easier to review.
• How to?
The page is divided into three sections:
– During a lesson, activity or workshop: take
the key points and details
– Review your notes afterwards and note
down study cues:
• Key ideas you will need to remember
with a prompt for each
• Key vocabulary
• Questions
– Afterwards, summarize your notes from the
lesson at the bottom of the page,
highlighting the main points.
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b. The Mapping Method
• This method is a way to make visual connections between related topics
and ideas and is particularly useful for visual learners who struggle with
linear note-taking methods.
• How to?
– Organize the page into topic areas, with main
topics branching out into sub-topics with detailed
information about each.
– Think about orientation of your paper and how
much space you will need. It may be more useful
to use a landscape orientation if there are several
sub-topics to cover.
– Write any important details beneath each sub-
topic, noting clear key points.
– You can continue the pattern accordingly,
depending on the level of detail you require.
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c. The Outlining Method
• This is a linear note-taking method and uses headings and bullet points
to organize topics and supporting information.
• The outlining method is very useful if you
need to include a lot of details and the
structure makes it easy to develop questions
from the key points noted.
• How to?
– Start your notes with a single bullet point for
the main topic.
– Place the first sub-topic below and indent it
slightly to the right.
– List any details or supporting facts below each
sub-topic heading, again with a slight
indentation to the right.
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d. The Charting Method
• This method uses columns to organize information and is very useful if the
lesson/ workshop/ material is covering a lot of facts.
• The columns also help you to identify any recurring themes or relationships
between the topics covered.
• How to?
– Write down your main topic at the top and
divide the page into columns. This will make
your notes easier to review.
– Label each column with a topic category. The
details of each category are filled out in the
rows below.
– As key points are mentioned, note them down
in corresponding column. Using the columns
makes it easy to add and categorize additional
notes if a topic is revisited over the course of a
lesson.
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e. The Sentence Method
• This method involves quickly jotting down the main key points in sentence-
form and is very useful in fast-paced session with a lot of contents to cover.
• Each line on the page should indicate a new and separate key point. This
layout helps you to write quick and simple notes with will be easy to review.
• How to?
– Write down important information the lecturer
or teacher has emphasized, either in sentence
or point-form.
– Start a new sentence or point for each new
detail.
– Organize the point using headings for each
main topic covered.
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5. Top tips for note-taking
Watch this video for the top tips for effective note-taking.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kxF1-jkz-U
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6. Digital notes
a. Benefits of digital note-taking tools:
Organize different types of notes (e.g. typed notes, handwritten notes,
Organize multimedia content such as image, video or audio, content from webpages,
attachments and documents).
Your notes can sometimes get messy and your notes may become confusing.
Editing Digital tools now make it easier for you to edit and rearrange your notes,
without the mess.
Through your notes with ease to find content quickly, adding tags to each
Search content item where necessary.
Share your content and collaborate with others. This is helpful if you are
Share working on a group project, if you want to compare notes or discuss
something with your learning companion but are in different location.
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6. Digital notes (cont.)
b. Examples of note-taking, annotation and mind mapping
applications:
• Typing and organizing notes:
– Digital notebooks allow you to keep notes between computer and
mobile devices, record audio notes, and easily copy and paste web
content.
– They are good for:
• taking notes in lectures or seminars
• storing URLs of useful websites when researching
• copying short extracts of text (but remember to include a citation!)
• recording unfamiliar terms or vocabulary
• working on a shared project
• organizing your notes clearly using notebooks and tags.
– Application links:
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6. Digital notes (cont.)
• Annotations and sketching:
– Creating mind maps on paper can sometimes be frustrating,
where you quickly run out of space. This is easily solved with the
use of mind-mapping applications which allow you to create, edit
and share mind maps quickly and intuitively on your digital device.
– They are good for:
• brainstorming project ideas
• planning essays
• visualizing your research and ideas
• linking your ideas
• managing and structuring your ideas.
– Application links:
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Activity 2
Work in Group: Note-taking activity (20 mins)
Choose one of the three articles you found in Activity 4-
Lecture 5.
– Practice highlighting the important information on PDF file.
– Use one the following note-taking methods to record the
main points of the articles:
• Mapping notes (using apps or hand-written)
• Linear notes (using apps or hand-written)
• Charting notes
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II - SUMMARIZING
1. Why summarize?
2. What to include in a summary?
3. Writing an effective summary
1. Why summarize?
• What is a summary?
– A summary is a clear and concise version of a longer piece of
text, written in your own words while preserving accurate
meaning of the original text. In writing and note-taking, you will
be required to summarize other people’s ideas as well as your
own.
• Will I need to write summaries on my university courses?
– University courses vary in their requirements, depending on the
subject area. Some courses will involve more writing and
summarizing skills than others, and they may be an important
part of your assessment.
– Writing an effective summary is a valuable skill for both your
studies and your future career. Some students summarize too
much in their assignments and fall short on their analysis and
argument, whereas others give too much detail when only a
concise summary is required.
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1. Why summarize? (cont.)
• When will summarizing be useful to me?
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2. What to include in a summary?
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3. Writing an effective summary
a. Summary purpose:
The purpose of your summary is key to determining the type of
response you give. Consider which of these you are expected to
do:
– Express agreement or disagreement with the author or their
ideas.
– Show how the author’s ideas might be interpreted or applied.
– Focus on and explore a key idea from the text and reflect on your
observations relating to that idea.
– Analyze and evaluate specific elements of the text, including
evidence, logic and the organization of the argument or research.
How effective are these specific elements?
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3. Writing an effective summary
(cont.)
b. Types of summary:
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3. Writing an effective summary
(cont.)
c. 8 steps to write an effective summary
1. Decide your goal 2. Read the text 3. Take notes 4. Try doing an oral
Think about and decide • Re-read the parts of • Highlight important summary
exactly which parts of texts you want to information and write • Without looking at
what you have read summarize, to ensure what you want to the original text, try
need to be included in you have a good summarize in note- to summarize orally:
your summary: understanding. form first. aloud or silently in
• The main points? • You need to • Avoid copying the your head.
• A supporting understand exactly text exactly, • Once you feel
argument? what the author is paraphrase instead. confident in your oral
trying to say so that • As you write your summary, you can
• The results of some you can paraphrase
research? notes, remind move to the written
accurately. yourself of the summary.
• Some background purpose of the
information only?
summary to ensure
you are including only
relevant information.
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3. Writing an effective summary
(cont.)
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3. Writing an effective summary
(cont.)
d. Checklist for effective summary
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Homework
• Homework: Assessment activity 3:
– Task:
• Choose an online article (200-500 words) in a newspaper or website that interests you and
relevant to your major.
• Apply the note-taking techniques you have studied in this lecture to take note of what you
read.
• Write a summary in 50-100 words.
– Works for submission:
• A print-screen of your taken-notes (if you use digital notes) or a picture of your hand-written
notes.
• A brief summary (50-100 words) on ‘What is the article about?’.
• Insert the word count of the summary and the link of the article at the end of the summary.
• You can do this assignment in English or Vietnamese. Remember to use 01 consistent
language throughout your work.
• Submit your works (as PDF file) to CMS for assessment.
- Name your file: [Class]_SSLG102_Assessment3_Name
- Example: GBD0903_SSGL102_Assessment3_NguyenVanA
– The assessment criteria: (/10) • Summary:
• Note-taking – Key contents covered: 3/10
– Key contents included: 2/10 – Proper use of language (i.e. paraphrasing): 1/10
– Effective note-taking layout: 2/10 – Word count obedience: 1/10
– Proper referencing: 1/10
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THANK YOU FOR THE
CLASS TODAY