Note-taking tips
Your own ideas are important, so record them in your notes along with the information from your resources.
Note-taking helps you remember what you've read. In fact, a good set of notes can be the foundation for your assignment. Use the tips below to help you get started.
As a general rule it's best to:
- read the text first to get the gist of it, then start taking notes on the second read
- only record information that relates to your
assignment question
- use headings in your notes, so they're easier to skim through later
- use dot points instead of full sentences and keep them short – one or two sentences is
fine
- use abbreviations or your own symbols for common words.
When you're taking notes:
- summarise sections of the text in a few dot points, without
looking at the text
- note important dates, events, people and places and copy the spelling correctly
- collect quotes to use later
- record the bibliographical details of all the
references you use in your notes
- look up any words you don't understand and record definitions in your notes.
For example
Writing your notes in your own words shows you what you do and don't understand. If the information you're reading doesn't make sense to you, find a source that does.
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