Thursday, October 6, 2011

Chapter 7: Making and Taking Notes

So, Honestly.. When I was given this chapter to read and respond to, I thought that it had to be the dullest assignment ever. I put off even reading the chapter until late last night, which is why my blogging is last minute as well. Obviously, I am a bigger nerd than I thought. I was reading about the different strategies of taking notes, and found myself getting excited.. Yes I just put that out there for the world to see.
Teachers are always telling students "Pay attention, take good notes, study, this is going to be on the TEST!" However, I cannot remember my teachers ever actually telling us HOW to take these amazing, life altering, grade changing notes. In all honesty, I was never much into studying, but if you had of seen my notes, you wouldn't have wanted to study either. So, this chapter has definitely made me think about how I can help my students in forming their notes. I really liked how the chapter divided the strategies by subject. Especially the subjects that I consider my weaker areas. I really liked the Math terms chart. That would have been really helpful last summer in Math 310. I also like the interactive discussion/ note taking for Social Studies. A board full of notes that students copy can be intimidating, making students never want to attempt learning the endless sea of facts.
Another thing brought up in this chapter is assessing the students note taking. This had NEVER occurred to me and I would have been horrified as a student if my teachers had asked to assess my note taking skills. But now as a future teacher I think that this is an excellent way to support metacognition in the students. I never thought of note taking as an important aspect of education, when I think important I think test, grades, tests, and more tests. However, on an average day what will students be found doing? Taking Notes! So this chapter has bumped up note taking/making on my educational priorities list!

1 comment:

  1. You're awesome, Brittany Gardner, what a great post. I agree, it's an important skill and equally important to give students the chance not only to try diff strategies of notetaking but opps to talk about what works best for them. Talk meta! Dr B

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