HACKER Q&A
📣 kotojo

How to Take Good Notes?


Having never gone to college and coasting my way through high school I never really learned good study habits, but I'm trying to change that now. I'm currently reading Design Data Intensive Applications and forcing myself to take notes. I have noticed that it helps me retain information much better than just reading, but I feel like I'm extremely inefficient. I am almost rewriting the whole book sentence by sentence as I got through the chapters.

How do you figure out what's "important"? How do you take notes on those important things in a concise manner?


  👤 bushi_do Accepted Answer ✓
There's been a lot of discussion about this on HN. Here's my annotated list of links that should get you started:

0.) To get started not copying, try paraphrasing (writing down concepts in your own words.) and ranking statements you paraphrased on a scale of 1-10 (10 is most important). Do enough of this tedious work, and you'll start to >>summarize<< what you're reading, and get an intuitive sense of what's most important to summarize.

1.) Search HN for "zettlekasten" and watch the youtube video about it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nPOI4f7yCag

This will help in understanding that note taking is a process and what's important emerges as part of this process. Expect some inefficiency.

Pro-tip: physical notecards are still the best for fewer than 5,000-10,000 cards.

2.) Here are some tips on the physical aspects of note-taking that helped me: 1.) use a few different colors, 2.) use a highlighter for important concepts, 3.) use the Cornell page layout (see #3 below), 4.) have one main concept per page/card so you can rearrange into a logical order, 5.) summarize key points at the bottom of each page, 6.)

3.) Try the Cornell method: http://lsc.cornell.edu/notes.html https://ubwp.buffalo.edu/ccvillage/wp-content/uploads/sites/... layout explained: https://www.csuohio.edu/sites/default/files/Note%20Taking%20...

4.) You can fall into a rabbit hole of optimizing notes. At the end of the day, spending time studying is all that matters.