Counselling and Career Development

Make notes

Why make notes?

You need to make notes because you need an information storage system.

What difference does it make?

You will understand the topic in more depth.

Distance learners do not attend classes to listen to lectures; they sit at home and read from their study guides. The study guide accompanies the textbook from which students master the course. Study reading is not enough. Successful students make notes of what they have read.

The notes serve two purposes:

  1. Notes act as a permanent record of time you spent on a section of the work.
  2. Notes serve as the first step in expanding your network of memory strategies. Note making is the link between study reading and answering assignment questions.

When you are learning new content, you have to ensure that the material is processed so that you understand and recall it. New information is best processed if you reorganise it to suit your way of learning. The best way of processing information is to make notes. Visual notes and linear notes are the two main styles of note-making. Broadly speaking, if you have an imaginative learning style, a creative, visual approach to note-making should appeal to you. If your learning style is more factual, you might prefer the tidier, step-by-step, narrative approach to make notes.

Two approaches to note-making

  • Visual note-making methods refer to mind maps, spider grams, branching notes, cluster grams, tables, flow charts, and organograms.
  • Narrative note-making methods refer to linear notes, listing, timeline notes, keyword and paragraph methods, question method, and segmenting and labelling.

Applications of the different methods

How do you decide which is the best method to apply? Students make notes differently, but they all manage to prepare adequately for their assignments and the exam. The most important thing to remember is to start reorganising the information to suit you.

Your choice depends on several issues, such as what time of the year is it (the beginning of the year equals an overview to establish a frame of reference, or exam preparation time equals detail to consolidate the knowledge base), your estimate of the nature of the study task (is it complex; unfamiliar; or entails many pages of learning), your learning style (do you start with an overall idea or do you prefer a step-by-step approach).

The following contains some suggestions you may want to experiment with. Starting a course means that a useful point of departure is the extraction of an overall idea of what the content is about. A mind map, cluster gram or organogram could be considered and is based on the list of content as well as chapter headings and subheadings to master the overview.

When you are faced with a chapter or section, you could use one of the narrative methods such as segmenting and labelling, keyword and paragraph method, or question method to master a closer understanding of the textbook or study guide. If you first applied one of the visual note-making methods, the structure of the course or the particular chapter should now be fixed in your memory. Keeping the structure in mind as you read through the chapter, and then making notes helps to change the feeling of unfamiliarity to one of knowing. You should be experiencing the "AH HA" feeling: "now I see how it fits together!"

Using both visual and narrative methods of making notes ensure that you do not get bored and drowsy while studying. Because you are using the methods interchangeably, you can maintain your concentration. By actively searching for meaning, recalling the information becomes easier. Mixing different note-making methods to master your course material is the characteristic of a study-wise student. Irrespective of your preferred style (visual or narrative) the challenge of note making is centred on your ability to experiment with various approaches to study tasks and to find the most effective matches.

Sources

  • Buzan, T. & Buzan B. (1995) The mind map book. London: BBC Books. 320p.
  • Deem, J. (1993) Study skills in practice. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. 418p.
  • Russell, P. (1979) The brain book. Know your mind and how to use it. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. 270p

Mind mapping to overview

Example of a visual note making method: mind map

Steps to follow

Step 1:

Start with a central image - use the list of content. It is the shortest summary of the book.

Step 2:

Add keywords/ phrases to the central image (section and chapter headings).

Step 3:

If you need more keywords/ phrases, use the headings and subheadings of each chapter. You have now established a frame of reference (an understanding of how different sections, chapters, and their subsections relate to each other).

Step 4:

Use the mind map as a self-test. Put away your books and notes. Take a clean sheet of paper and from memory reproduce what you have just mind mapped. Compare it to your first effort.

Source

  • Buzan, T. & Buzan B. (1995) The mind map book. London: BBC Books. 320p.

Question system - to control detail

Example of a narrative note-making method: question system

Steps to follow

  • Step 1: Split the page into two: the left-hand column (a third of the page) and the right-hand column (two-thirds of the page).
  • Step 2: Left-hand column: turn the study objectives into questions- your notes in the right-hand column will answer the questions on the left.
  • Step 3: Right-hand column: make your notes as you work through the study guide and textbook, as answers to the questions posed.
  • Step 4: You may add more questions and answer them in the right-hand column. To revise for exam purposes, block the notes and see whether you can answer the questions by talking aloud or writing them down.

Source

Deem, J. (1993) Study skills in practice. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. 418p.

Read Study @ Unisa

Study @ Unisa is your study survival kit. Use the information in this guide to help you get started with your studies. In addition, the guide provides quick links to all the support offered by Unisa, as well as information regarding important processes such as submitting assignments.

Further resources

  • Contact the Unisa centre closest to you to enquire about possible study skills workshops that will be offered. If you cannot attend a workshop in person, download the Notemaking workshop presentation.

  • Follow the Counselling & Career Development Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/unisacareers

Last modified: 2023/08/07