The Cornell method is an effective way of taking notes, remembering, and learning. Below is how it works. Divide the page on which you are going to write (you remember better than typing) into 3 parts: a narrow vertical column on the left, a wide vertical column on the right, and a horizontal section at the bottom of the page: • In the right column, your detailed notes will be written. • In the left column, the most important keywords will be written. • In the section at the bottom, a summary of a few sentences will be written. Summarize the page in a few sentences. Take notes in the right column during the lesson. Use short sentences, keywords, bullet points, arrows to connect things, and make it visual by using pictures and icons. Keep it simple and immediately summarize what is being said. Use a new page for each new topic, this keeps it organized. Write keywords in the left column at the end of the lesson – or afterwards. Think of names, places, dates, key words, etc. You can also turn these into questions, so you can learn them later. Then write a short summary at the bottom of the page: what would you tell someone to make this topic clear? Now you can place a sheet over the right section and quiz yourself: explain terms or concepts from the left column and then check with what is on the right to see if it matches.
Peters, J. (2020, 7 januari). De Cornell methode om aantekeningen te maken. Geraadpleegd van: https://www.planning-en-agenda.nl/de-cornell-methode-om-aantekeningen-te-maken/
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