When reviewing, the notes in the notebook will be of great use, but many people are used to taking notes in books. They think it is more convenient and intuitive to take notes in books.
However, some parents have some doubts about their children's notes in the book, because when they see that their children's books are full of memories and even "messy", others simply can't understand what she wrote.
In fact, how to write notes and where to write them are all personal preferences, and there is no fixed model and standard. Some students like to listen to the teacher in class first, simply mark the key points on the tree, and then use the time after class to arrange notes in the notebook.
Some students like to use textbooks as notebooks and draw circles directly on the books. If there is not enough space in the book, they will stick it on the book with post-it notes.
Taking notes is not blindly copying the contents of the teacher's courseware into the notebook, but having your own thinking. No matter which way you take notes, there are several points that everyone must pay attention to:
The handwriting of the notes should be neat and clear.
Neat handwriting is the foundation, and the words on the notes are not required to look good, but at least they should be clear at a glance, and the notes that you can't make can't be understood.
First of all, the size of words should be consistent, and the spacing between words should be uniform. When taking notes, make good use of serial numbers to make the notes clear. Clear and neat notes will be of great use in review, which will greatly improve students' review efficiency.
Some students like to huddle together when writing, and the words hold each other in groups. This kind of font will cause fatigue after reading for a long time, which is not conducive to later review.
The written records should be refined.
Many students like to copy what the teacher said or said in the courseware into their notebooks when taking notes, but this recording method is completely "putting the cart before the horse".
Many students copy notes just for the sake of copying. As for what the teacher said in class, it just went in one ear and out the other. This is also the confusion of many parents: children's notes are so detailed, why haven't their grades improved?
Taking notes is just a memo. You don't need to remember what you have already understood in the book. The main time and energy in class should be devoted to listening, thinking and understanding the teacher's content.