I have a junior in college and one in 1st year med school and you are so wrong |
No they don’t. That is so rare LOL |
+1 I have been telling my teens (one in college, other in HS) about taking notes by hand, not on the computer, because it uses that muscle memory. They fought it initially, but when they started handwriting the notes, it really helped. My one DC who is a straight A student in HS and college said that they can picture their notes on the paper in their mind's eye, and it helps when they take tests. |
pfft.. they don't listen to parents, either. They just listen to their own voices in their own echo chamber. |
Well my sample is small...but just had about 6 kids from different colleges hanging out at my house. This is what they described. 2 go to T20 schools. These kids study by rewatching lectures on fast speed. DH has an intern who does not attend her class...just watches the video. |
. That is incredibly lazy education then. Yikes. Well I guess it depends on the class. In my upperclassman science classes that wouldn’t have been enough at all to pass. |
The intern is a fairly lazy student. The other kids all came from RMIB and Blair. They are top students. I am not sure why reviewing the classes is lazy education. It is just a reasource that was not available when I was in school. |
What on earth are you saying?? |
My 9th grader has not only learned to take notes (taught in class in MCPS) but has had multiple assignments where he has had to upload photos to prove that he has taken notes. |
You think that taking notes means solely writing down what is on slides? Hahahaha |
|
People process in different ways. If you are an audio learning, the opportunity to listen to the class again is great. For another kid the process of writing notes aids in memory. Another kid really needs that study group to discuss.
I think those of us who went to school before all the high tech of classrooms today have a different concept of learning. I could never snap a picture of my teachers summary outline or graph from the board! It is better than my writing down some notes about it. |
which do you think will actually help you learn and remember the content? Handwriting notes where you paraphrase what the teacher is saying or snapping a photo and never looking at it again until you want to remember one point from it? |
Neither. Answering a question that forces me to think is the best way. Bonus points if the question came from me, not from the homework I was given. |
This is not learning. This is absorption with delayed release for regurgitation. |
| College prof here. Possessing information is not the same as knowing it, or (more importantly) the same as having learned enough about it to be able to redeploy it in new ways. Notetaking - active distillation accompanied by organization and thought - is a first step towards building active control of information before examining and synthesizing it. Downloading a copy of my PowerPoint does not constitute learning anything. Neither does having a copy of my notes. My notes helped *me* learn so I could teach. My students' own notes, made by them (including those made in accordance with learning accommodations) help *them* learn so they can use what I am teaching them. |