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Showing all 12 results Save | Export
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Bui, Dung C.; Myerson, Joel; Hale, Sandra – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2013
Three experiments examined note-taking strategies and their relation to recall. In Experiment 1, participants were instructed either to take organized lecture notes or to try and transcribe the lecture, and they either took their notes by hand or typed them into a computer. Those instructed to transcribe the lecture using a computer showed the…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Notetaking, Learning Strategies, Improvement
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Malie, Senian; Akir, Oriah – Research in Education, 2012
Learning approaches, learning methods and learning environments have different effects on students? academic performance. However, they are not the sole factors that impact students? academic achievement. The aims of this research are three-fold: to determine the learning approaches preferred by most students and the impact of the learning…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Learning Strategies, Learning Processes, Social Sciences
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Boyle, Joseph R. – Learning Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2006
Students with learning disabilities lack effective note-taking skills for a variety of reasons. Despite the important role that notes play in helping students to understand lecture content information and serving as documents for later review, many students with learning disabilities are simply not effective note-takers. Many of these students…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Notetaking, Study Skills, Lecture Method
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Rozalski, Michael E. – Beyond Behavior, 2008
Generally, teachers are good students. Most know how to successfully address a variety of academic tasks demands. Many know how to compensate for any personal weaknesses they have with specific skills. Sometimes teachers are such good students that they forgot what it was like to struggle to learn something. Unfortunately, students with emotional…
Descriptors: Test Wiseness, Memory, Study Skills, Learning Strategies
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Gibbs, Graham; And Others – Medical Teacher, 1987
Described are five techniques to improve student learning during lectures: (1) separating listening from recording and requiring note-taking to be undertaken from memory; (2) using active review during the lecture; (3) using structured discussion; (4) using instant questionnaires; and (5) having students summarize important things from the…
Descriptors: College Science, Higher Education, Learning Activities, Learning Strategies
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Hughes, Charles A.; Suritsky, Sharon K. – Preventing School Failure, 1993
Research indicates that students with learning disabilities may experience significant difficulty with taking notes during teacher lectures. Approaches for helping students include task accommodations (such as taping the lectures or purchasing notes) and notetaking skill/strategy instruction (such as paraphrasing, outlining, using abbreviations,…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Learning Strategies, Lecture Method, Notetaking
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Lazarus, 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
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King, 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
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Lambiotte, Judith G.; Dansereau, Donald F. – Journal of Experimental Education, 1992
Effects of knowledge maps, outlines, or lists of key terms on recall by 74 undergraduates (29 males and 45 females) of 2 biology lectures were compared. The hypothesized advantage of maps over outlines or lists was not found generally, but it was found for students low in prior knowledge. (SLD)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Higher Education, Learning Strategies, Lecture Method
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Kiewra, Kenneth A.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1991
Students tend to emphasize important information more than less important information in their lecture notes. Whether this strategy changes with lecture repetition was investigated in 3 experiments with 71 undergraduate students. Students' assessments and shifts of strategy with lecture repetition are discussed. (SLD)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Higher Education, Knowledge Level, Learning Strategies
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Austin, Jennifer L.; Lee, Melissa; Carr, Jeffrey P. – Journal of Instructional Psychology, 2004
Notetaking is important for recording and remembering class content in most university courses. Despite the importance of this behavior, however, students are often poor notetakers. This study compared undergraduates' notes after traditional lecture, lecture with slides, and lecture with slides plus guided notes. Data on the percentages of…
Descriptors: Course Content, Undergraduate Study, Lecture Method, Notetaking
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Kiewra, Kenneth A.; And Others – Instructional Science, 1989
Discussion of the functions of note-taking and reviewing notes in the learning process highlights two studies of undergraduates that were conducted with three treatment groups: (1) note-taking only; (2) note-taking and review; and (3) review only with borrowed notes. One study involved learning from a videotaped lecture, and one from a printed…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Higher Education, Intermode Differences, Learning Processes