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Cornell Notes: Take Effective Notes

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47 points by avinashisnojoke 5 years ago · 6 comments

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wyxuan 5 years ago

Oh my goodness, cornell notes. Perhaps it was the way we were forced to use cornell notes by my secondary school teachers, but I never saw the appeal nor the benefit.

The summarization portion is probably the main advantage over the other note taking methods IMO.

  • ravenstine 5 years ago

    To me, it defeated the greatest benefit of taking notes, which isn't being able to reference them but the fact that writing down important information seems to help with memory retention. If I'm having to think about structuring my notes, then that's less likely to happen.

    In fact, might it be better to take unstructured notes, and then restructure them later?

    • datameta 5 years ago

      That actually makes quite a lot of sense. Step 0: Take unstructured notes Steps 1-3: Cornell method

      • data_now 5 years ago

        Personally, this is my preferred approach. I feel uncomfortable making final notes the minute I have just learned something new. It's like your bubble of knowledge has to expand and connect to other thoughts and ideas in your head, otherwise my notes feel so superficial and incomplete.

0xdeadb00f 5 years ago

I started using this just to test it out when I started studying compci a year ago.

It works relatively well for me, though I have become extremely relaxed in the way I use it.

When I started I would write much more in the "recall" column. Now when I write in the note section, I add to the recall section if it makes sense for the note (so, not always - before I would always try to write in the recall column even for things where it didn't make sense to). I also skip the summary bit out of pure laziness.

It works alright. It's become more of a routine study thing more than anything. But I do think it helps me order my thoughts, creating questions in the recall column is a useful exercise I feel.

keenmaster 5 years ago

I've never regretted the "unstructured data" approach to note-taking. I write furiously fast, and copious note-taking has enhanced both aided and unaided recall. It works very well during didactic teaching sessions (as opposed to conversational, Socratic teaching). I happen not to be a fan of Socratic teaching anyway.

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