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Reading and Lecture Strategies
Taking Lecture Notes
Reading
Books (Jacqueline Dirks)
Taking
Notes on Books and Articles (Jacqueline Dirks)
Reading Critical Articles Critical
Article Synopsis ("Précis")
Taking Lecture Notes
Most classes at Reed are conferences; however, every Reedie will at some
point in his or her career need to take a lecture class, whether it is
Hum 110 or Intro Bio. Taking good notes is crucial for good conference
participation and for learning the material. It is hubris
to believe that you will remember the key details of every Hum 110 lecture
at the end of the semester based on memory alone. (Many students find
it difficult to remember all the lecturers' names, let alone the detailed
content of what they said.) It will be easier to study for exams if your
lecture notes are kept either in a three-ring binder or in a bound notebook.
Bring this notebook or binder with you to conference!
What should your notes include?
- The date, the title of the lecture, the lecturer's name, the course.
- A list of key terms that were defined in lecture or you did not understand.
- The thesis of the lecture.
- The evidence used to support the thesis.
- The structure of the lecture. Sometimes lecturers will provide you
with an outline. You can use this to structure your notes. If the lecturer
did not provide you with an outline (or even if he did), listen for
the four main components usually found in academic
arguments.
- A list of things you didn't understand about lecture that you need
to look up or you'd like to discuss in conference.
- A list of things said in lecture that you disagree with and why.
- A list of ideas that excited you from lecture that you'd like to discuss
in conference.
If your conference isn't directly after lecture, you will probably want
to review your lecture notes 5-10 minutes before conference and add to
them any questions you had from the readings.
Reading critical articles
When you are assigned a critical article for class, you should make sure
you have identified the main argument before coming to
conference. Ideally you will also bring with you a list of questions,
strengths, and weaknesses about the article.
The first step is to identify the argument. Joseph Williams, the author
of The Craft of Argument, Style, and The Craft of
Research, argues most academic articles have four main parts. Usually
these components appear in the introduction to the article, but sometimes
they are woven throughout the article. When you read academic papers you
should keep an eye out for these parts of the argument and either highlight
them or write them out on a separate piece of paper.
These four parts are
(1) Common Ground: Establishes a brief context that
the author intends to qualify or question. This may be either a commonly
held belief (some people...) or may be what other researchers have said
about the subject.
(2) But... Introduces a question about something key
that is not known or fully understood or contradicts this common ground.
(3) So What? States the significance of the question
raised
(4) Thesis: the answer to problem/question. States
the author’s main claim.
Here is an example of an introduction with this format:
Ever since the sixteenth century, when Girolamo Cardano began thinking
about games of chance in quantitative terms (Cardano, 1545), risk has
been treated as a purely mathematical problem ... In the twentieth century,
researchers shifted their focus ... These problems, too, have been addressed
almost exclusively with mathematical tools. context ( common
ground) But researchers who try to communicate
risk to a public audience have failed to understand that most people
view do not view risk not as a rationally quantifiable question, but
rather in ways that seem puzzling, even irrational, question (So
what?) As a result, we do not understand how ordinary people
make decisions about risks in their daily lives and so fail to communicate
with the public about risk. significance Among the general public, most
decisions about risk include at least six factors that may not be precisely
quantifiable but are systematic and therefore predictable. (Thesis/main
claim) (Example cited in Research and Its Reporting
by Wayne C. Booth, Gregory G. Colomb, and Joseph M. Williams.)
Many students miss the main point of an article because they mistake
the common ground for the author's own thesis. Identifying all four parts
of the argument can help you avoid this mistake.
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