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4 answers

Well, write down what they say. All the nouns and verbs. When your teacher takes a breather or gets off-topic, write down the rest of the facts. If all else fails, have a friend take the notes one day, and you the next so that you do not get too worn out. Then photo-copy the notes or re-write them into your notebook or binder. If the writing is not legible, you can always ask during class for a re-cap so that you can at least summarize it.

2007-01-07 05:37:25 · answer #1 · answered by mad 2 · 0 0

If you are taking notes while the teacher is speaking just take a small voice recorder into class the record what the teacher says and then you can listen later and take the notes at your own speed. You might want to check with the teacher first and make sure its OK but a lot of college students do this.

2007-01-07 13:44:15 · answer #2 · answered by hIQtie 2 · 0 0

-- Start by writing down anything the teacher puts on the board.
-- Note any questions the teacher asks, especially if the teacher asks those questions more than once. Those questions will probably be on the test.
-- Look up examples of the Cornell Notes system on the web. This is a good format to use because you can add in more thoughts and reminders later.

http://www.clt.cornell.edu/campus/learn/LSC%20Resources/cornellsystem.pdf

http://www.jarnot.com/twiki/pub/Public/CornellNoteTakingSystem/notes.pdf

2007-01-07 13:37:07 · answer #3 · answered by ecolink 7 · 0 0

listen to de teacher and rite down stuff

2007-01-07 13:40:11 · answer #4 · answered by g0odbyexd 2 · 1 0

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