How to Take Notes in a Lecture (3 Methods That Work)

How to Take Notes in a Lecture (3 Methods That Work)

By Mr. Neal · Tutor Corner LLC

Writing every word the professor says is the worst note-taking strategy. The point isn’t to make a transcript — it’s to build a tool you’ll actually study from.

Quick answer

Cornell method works for most. Outline method works for math/science. Sketch-noting works for visual subjects. Pick one and stick with it for a semester.

1. Cornell method

Page divided into 3 areas: narrow left margin for keywords, wide right column for notes, bottom strip for summary. During lecture: take notes in the right column. After (within 24 hours): write keywords in the left margin. End of week: 2-sentence summary at bottom.

2. Outline method

Hierarchical bullet points. Main topic → sub-topic → details. Great for math, science, history. Capture structure, not sentences.

3. Sketch-noting

Concepts as small diagrams, arrows, labeled images. Best for biology, physics, anatomy. Slower but more memorable.

The key habit: review notes within 24 hours. Without review, you lose ~70% of what was written.

What NOT to do

  • Type everything — handwriting beats typing for retention.
  • Highlight everything — if everything’s important, nothing is.
  • Use only one color.
  • Skip the review.

Building better study habits?

Book a free 30-min consultation.

Book Free Consultation

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top