Note-Taking Formats

You can make class time more productive by using your listening skills to take effective notes, but first you have to decide on one of the following four commonly used formats for note taking: the Cornell, outline, paragraph, and list formats. Any format can work as long as you use it consistently.

image
Serious Business
The importance of developing good note-taking skills cannot be overstated. Carefully read about different note-taking formats presented on the next several pages, study the examples carefully, and try out each one. Find the format that works best for you. Use it to its fullest, and you’re on your way to college success.
wavebreakmedia/Shutterstock

Cornell Format Using the Cornell format, one of the best-known methods for organizing notes, you create a “recall” column on each page of your notebook or your document by drawing a vertical line about 2 to 3 inches from the left border (see Figure 7.1). As you take notes during class—whether writing down or typing ideas, making lists, or using an outline or paragraph format—write only in the wider column on the right; leave the left-hand recall column blank. You will use the recall column to write down or type the main ideas and important details for tests and exams as you go through your notes, which you should do as soon as possible after class, preferably within an hour or two. Many students have found the recall column to be an important part of note taking, one that becomes an effective study tool for tests and exams.

image

FIGURE 7.1 image Note Taking in the Cornell Format

Outline Format Some students find that an outline is the best way for them to organize their notes. In a formal outline, Roman numerals (I, II, III, etc.) mark the main ideas. Other ideas relating to each main idea are marked by uppercase letters (A, B, C, etc.). Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3, etc.) and lowercase letters (a, b, c, etc.) mark related ideas in descending order of importance or detail. Using the outline format allows you to add details, definitions, examples, applications, and explanations (see Figure 7.2).

image

FIGURE 7.2 image Note Taking in the Outline Format

Paragraph Format When you take notes while you read, you might decide to write summary paragraphs—two or three sentences that sum up a larger section of material (see Figure 7.3). This method might not work well for class notes because it’s difficult to summarize a topic until your instructor has covered it completely. By the end of the lecture, you might have forgotten critical information.

image

FIGURE 7.3 image Note Taking in the Paragraph Format

List Format The list format can be effective in taking notes on terms and definitions, facts, or sequences, such as the body’s digestive system (see Figure 7.4). It is easy to use lists in combination with the Cornell format, with key terms on the left and their definitions and explanations on the right.

image

FIGURE 7.4 image Note Taking in the List Format