Reading Strategies
12. Engaging in Reading: Making Notes
Notes help readers to monitor their understanding and help writers and speakers to organize information
and clarify their thinking. T-Charts, KWL charts, Venn Diagrams, webs, trees, and key-word lists are all great ways to organize your notes as you read.
Asking yourself a few questions after reading a section will help you take good notes. Some effective questions are:
- What part of this section is the most important?
- What does the author want me to know about this topic?
- What did I find really interesting about that part?
- What other questions do I have?
Here are some pointers to note taking:
| TIPS | WHY |
| Write down the date of your note-making. | • helps you remember context • if you have written the notes on a loose sheet of paper, date helps you organize notes later |
| Give the notes a title, listing the text the notes are about. |
• helps you quickly identify information you may be looking for later |
| Use paper that can be inserted later into a binder, or have a special notebook for note making, or use recipe cards. Use notepad, outlining, or annotation features of your word processing software. |
• you need to be able to organize your notes for easy access for use in studying, or in research reports • loose-leaf paper, a single notebook, or small cards are convenient in library research |
| Use point form, your own shorthand or symbols, and organizers such as charts, webs, arrows. Use the draw and graphic functions of your software. |
• point form and shorthand is faster, easier to read later, helps you summarize ideas • organizers help you see links and structures, organize your ideas |
| Use headings and subheading in the text as a guide for organizing your own notes. |
• this part of the organization is already done for you; provides a structure |
| Don’t copy text word for word. Choose only the key words, or put the sentences in your own words. If you want to use a direct quote, be sure to use quotation marks. Don’t write down words that you don’t know unless you intend to figure them out or look them up. Use software’s copy and paste function to select key words only. |
• helps you understand what you have read • short form is much easier for studying and reading later • helps avoid plagiarism (using someone else’s writing or ideas as your own) |
| Write down any questions you have about the topic. |
• gives you ideas for further research • reminds you to ask others, clarify points • gives you practice in analyzing while reading |
| Review your notes when you are done. | • ensures that they’re legible • enables you to go back to anything you meant to look at again • helps you reflect on and remember what you’ve read |