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Effects of Guided Notes versus Completed Notes during Lectures on College Students' Quiz Performance
Neef, Nancy A.; McCord, Brandon E.; Ferreri, Summer J. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2006
We compared the effects of guided lecture notes versus completed lecture notes on pre- to postlecture improvements in quiz performance across two sections of a college course. The results of a counterbalanced multielement design did not reveal consistent differences between the two note formats on students' mean quiz scores. However, fewer errors…
Descriptors: Lecture Method, Notetaking, Comparative Analysis, College Students
Peer reviewedScerbo, Mark W.; And Others – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1992
Effects of time on notetaking and immediate retention, the relative effectiveness of spoken and written cues, and cuing schedules were studied with 160 students. Retention from lecture portions with more or fewer notes was similar, written-cued statements were better retained, and cuing schedules had subtle effects. (SLD)
Descriptors: College Students, Cues, Higher Education, Lecture Method
Peer reviewedLazarus, Belinda Davis – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 1996
These suggestions for helping adolescent students with mild disabilities take notes emphasize use of a skeleton outline of the main ideas and related concepts of a lecture, with space to maximize student responding as the student completes the outline during the lecture or reading of an assigned chapter. (DB)
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Learning Strategies, Lecture Method, Mild Disabilities
Peer reviewedKing, Alison – American Educational Research Journal, 1992
Self-questioning, summarizing, and review of lecture notes were compared as strategies for learning from lectures for 56 underprepared college students. Subjects were randomly assigned to self-questioning (19 students), summarizing (19 students), and notetaking-review (18 students) conditions. Self-questioners performed better than summarizers and…
Descriptors: College Students, Comparative Analysis, Higher Education, Learning Strategies
Collison, Michele N-K – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1992
Many college students are paying others to attend lecture classes and take notes, a practice that angers many professors and caused one university to sue a note-taking company over copyrights. Although students and some faculty say the notes are helpful in large, impersonal classes, others say they encourage poor attendance. (MSE)
Descriptors: Attendance Patterns, College Students, Copyrights, Court Litigation
Peer reviewedKiewra, Kenneth A.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1991
Note-taking functions (encoding, encoding plus storage, and storage) and note-taking techniques (conventional, linear, and matrix) were studied for 96 college undergraduates. Results are explained in relation to repetition, generative processing, note completeness, and the potential of note-taking techniques to facilitate performance. (SLD)
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Encoding (Psychology), Higher Education, Lecture Method
Peer reviewedBenton, Stephen L.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1993
How lecture note taking influences writing processes was studied in 4 experiments involving 392 undergraduates. The writing model of L. S. Flower and J. R. Hayes (1981) served as theoretical foundation. Results support the effects of external storage and encoding plus internal storage on writing processes. (SLD)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Encoding (Psychology), Essays, Higher Education
Peer reviewedSuritsky, Sharon K.; Hughes, Charles A. – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1991
The literature on notetaking is reviewed, including theoretical perspectives and listener- and lecturer-controlled variables influencing both the encoding function and storage functions of notetaking. Findings are applied to training secondary and postsecondary students with learning disabilities in notetaking skills. (DB)
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Lecture Method, Listening Skills, Notetaking
Fahmny, Jane Jackson; Bilton, Linda – Guidelines, 1992
The linguistic features of 40 science lectures were examined at Sultan Qaboos University. Results are reported and suggestions are offered for helping English for Academic Purposes instructors and materials writers improve the listening and note-taking skills of nonnative students. (Contains eight references.) (LB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, English for Academic Purposes, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Thrailkill, Nancy J.; Ormrod, Jeanne Ellis – 1994
Three experiments describe the effects of imagery on learning a large and integrated body of information from a college lecture. It was hypothesized that high-imagery phrases would be more easily recalled and would promote recall of abstract verbal phrases in close temporal proximity to them. In experiment 1, 22 undergraduates attended a lecture…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Imagery, Lecture Method, Memory
McClain, Anita – 1986
Professors need to stimulate both sides of students' brain to allow for efficient increase of information absorption. As an alternative to linear outlines, mind maps can provide for more effective comprehension as related ideas are conceptualized from the center out to supporting details, as well as from top to bottom or left to right. The mind…
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Mapping, Higher Education
Peer reviewedKiewra, Kenneth A. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1985
The effects of two learning techniques on immediate and delayed tests examining factual and high-order learning outcomes was examined using 23 college students. Results indicated that listening to a lecture and subsequently reviewing the instructor's notes leads to higher student achievement than taking and reviewing personal lecture notes.…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Students, Encoding (Psychology), Higher Education
Peer reviewedClerehan, Rosemary – English for Specific Purposes, 1995
This study examined notes taken by 29 undergraduate native and non-native speakers of English during a lecture on commercial law. It found that native speakers took more detailed notes and more accurately recorded the hierarchical structure and principal elements of the lecture than non-native speakers. (48 references) (MDM)
Descriptors: Business Education, College Students, English (Second Language), Higher Education
Hult, Richard E., Jr.; And Others – 1984
The study examined the encoding function in student note taking in relationship to learning from a university lecture. It was expected that note taking effectiveness would be positively related to learning; and, that the notes of high and low effective note takers would differ significantly. After pretesting, a 551-word lecture on research methods…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, College Students, Comparative Analysis, Content Analysis
Henk, William A.; Stahl, Norman A. – 1985
The usefulness of taking notes to enhance recall was assessed, based on reviewing the research literature using the techniques of meta-analysis. Meta-analysis allows for both the computation of the strength of an effect within studies and the determination of mean effect sizes averaged across related studies. Fourteen studies that maintained…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Educational Research, Encoding (Psychology), Higher Education

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