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Cornell Notes: Take Effective Notes

by avinashisnojoke on 8/5/20, 10:59 PM with 6 comments

  • by wyxuan on 8/6/20, 5:08 AM

    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.

  • by 0xdeadb00f on 8/7/20, 10:33 AM

    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.

  • by keenmaster on 8/6/20, 2:50 PM

    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.