1. I attended almost every single class. In my second semester, I
missed one because of a traffic problem, one because of a doctor's
appointment, and two because I was sick. I didn't miss any first
semester. Caveat: I liked attending class, so this wasn't a burden.
2.
I took notes on my laptop. Caveat: I can't handwrite at all and find it
very distracting when I have to do so. I learned a lot less in class
the two days I had to handwrite notes because I forgot my power cable.
3. I created a new file for each day and each class. For example, notes_torts_020404.doc, notes_civpro_041604.doc.
4. I am ashamed to admit this, but I used MS Word and (gasp!) it worked well. At least it was on a Mac.
5.
I printed out all my notes every few weeks or so and put them in a
binder. I had one binder for each class. I used this binder when
outlining.
6. I wrote down much of what the professor said,
organizing it in my head as I went. Caveat: This only worked for me
because I am a fast typist, so I could organize and still write down
most of what the professor said at the same time.
7. I wrote down the Socratic questions the professors asked other students.
8.
I almost never wrote down anything that a fellow student said, unless
the professor explicitly endorsed it as correct or asked the student to
repeat what he had said for the benefit of the class. If I did write
down something from a fellow student because I liked it, I usually
wrote it in my notes that it came from a student.
9. If a professor repeated a statement a few times, I always wrote it down, sometimes underlining it.
10.
I always brought my casebooks to class. If the professor quoted
directly from a case or essay, I highlighted those lines in my
casebook. I did not otherwise mark in my books at all. I found this
useful when studying for exams as I had a visual record of what the
professor considered important enough to quote aloud. Caveat: I hate
looking at books with highlights and pencil marks.
11. I briefed
all the cases first semester, and about 25% of the cases second
semester. Second semester my professors weren't as Socratic, so
briefing was less important, and I was also able to read more
effectively by then. I'll write more on briefing later, but in terms of
notetaking, I didn't take class notes on the case in my brief. I found
switching back and forth between my notes and my brief too distracting.
I did leave my brief open for reference in case I was called on, but
all class notes were in one place, the file I mentioned above.
12.
When we started talking about a specific case, I wrote the case name in
italic and bold and then continued taking notes beneath that heading.
13.
As time went on, I was better at sorting out what the professor
considered important. Early on my notes were very long, but later they
were shorter because I could figure out sooner what the professor
considered important. I probably averaged about three to four typed
pages per fifty-minute class, single spaced but with lots of new
paragraphs and whitespace because I don't like looking at cluttered
pages.
14. My section was a friendly section, and we shared
notes freely with each other. I gave mine away regularly, and on the
times I missed class, I usually received at least two copies of other
people's notes. If I felt that I missed something in class, I asked my
friends for their notes on that topic, printed those out, and put them
in my binder next to my own notes. I found the notes from my fellow
students very useful. I've heard of people hoarding their notes, but I
didn't see it happen in my section, and sharing notes made life a lot
easier for everybody.
15. I didn't try to study too much in
class, reserving studying for later. I used class time primarily to
clarify concepts and to discover what the professor thought was
important. Getting the law into my head, into my own words, and really
understanding it was something I had to do on my own. Caveat: I learn
by writing in my own words by myself. People who learn by more aural
means and group means probably learned more new concepts in class than
I did.
I think that's all for notetaking. I'll update this later if I think of something else.
[Update: It occurred to me when I reread this that you might think I
started out doing all this from the beginning and that I was some scary
über-efficient beginning 1L. I didn't and I wasn't. This is what I
ended up doing, what eventually worked for me, but it took me a while
to find the pattern that worked. I don't really feel qualified to give
advice, but I wouldn't worry about it if it takes you awhile to figure
out your pattern too.]
Monday, July 5, 2004
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1 comment:
Thanks, T, for your time on posting this. I find it very informative and useful. :)
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