I. Annotating
A. Definition
B. What it does for you
II. SQ3R
III. Applying your skills: The Annotated
Bibliography
IV. Taking Lecture Notes: Annotating in the
classroom
Annotation is a summary and/or evaluation
based off of any experience with media (books,
journals, websites, podcasts, etc.)
 Traditional Lecture vs. Discussion
 Traditional Lecture: Review your notes,
summaries, and readings after the class to
reinforce the material
 Discussion: Do all of the reviewing BEFORE
class so it is fresh in your brain, and you can
actively participate in the discussion
 Annotating
◦ Helps you engage with your sources in a critical way
◦ Allows you to familiarize yourself with previous
literature to create a strong foundation for further
research
◦ Helps you formulate and revise strong thesis
statements
◦ Helps you develop a point of view
 An Annotation System:
◦ Only has to make sense to the reader
◦ Should be consistent
◦ Text should be underlined rather than highlighted
to avoid “tunnel vision”
◦ Write in the margins of what you are reading, or
leave space for annotations in the notes you take in
class
 Survey
 Question
 Read Actively
 Respond
 Review
You can’t annotate a textbook if you don’t
understand the layout. Pay close attention to:
 Topic sentences
 Major ideas
 Details that support major ideas
 What are you reading about?
 What do you want to learn?
 What is the definition of that word?
 Why?
 Affective Reading vs. Informational Reading
 Affective Reading: Reading for fun.
 Informational Reading: Reading to retain
information and facts.
 Tie your frame of reference to it
◦ How does your unique outlook affect your view of the
text?
 Personal experiences
◦ Connecting personal experiences to similar events from
the text (i.e. loss of a loved one) makes the material
more relatable
 Connect new information to previous knowledge
◦ Building new information on top of what you already
know is a technique known as “scaffolding.”
Summary: If you cannot summarize what you have
read, it is possible that you did not fully
understand the material
Successful annotations should always include:
 Main ideas
 Enumerated lists
 Unfamiliar or important vocabulary
No! It only has to make sense to you! However,
here are a few useful approaches:
 Map, Cluster, or Web
 Lists
 Timeline
 Purdue University Calumet Writing Center
 WritingCenter@Purduecal.edu 219-989-2200
 Writing Center Handouts
◦ http://www.pnc.edu/engl/writingcenter/handouts.html
 Purdue OWL
◦ http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/
 Developing Textbook Thinking by Sherrie L.
Nist and William Diehl

Annotating Textbooks & Taking Lecture Notes

  • 2.
    I. Annotating A. Definition B.What it does for you II. SQ3R III. Applying your skills: The Annotated Bibliography IV. Taking Lecture Notes: Annotating in the classroom
  • 3.
    Annotation is asummary and/or evaluation based off of any experience with media (books, journals, websites, podcasts, etc.)
  • 4.
     Traditional Lecturevs. Discussion  Traditional Lecture: Review your notes, summaries, and readings after the class to reinforce the material  Discussion: Do all of the reviewing BEFORE class so it is fresh in your brain, and you can actively participate in the discussion
  • 5.
     Annotating ◦ Helpsyou engage with your sources in a critical way ◦ Allows you to familiarize yourself with previous literature to create a strong foundation for further research ◦ Helps you formulate and revise strong thesis statements ◦ Helps you develop a point of view
  • 6.
     An AnnotationSystem: ◦ Only has to make sense to the reader ◦ Should be consistent ◦ Text should be underlined rather than highlighted to avoid “tunnel vision” ◦ Write in the margins of what you are reading, or leave space for annotations in the notes you take in class
  • 7.
     Survey  Question Read Actively  Respond  Review
  • 8.
    You can’t annotatea textbook if you don’t understand the layout. Pay close attention to:  Topic sentences  Major ideas  Details that support major ideas
  • 9.
     What areyou reading about?  What do you want to learn?  What is the definition of that word?  Why?
  • 10.
     Affective Readingvs. Informational Reading  Affective Reading: Reading for fun.  Informational Reading: Reading to retain information and facts.
  • 11.
     Tie yourframe of reference to it ◦ How does your unique outlook affect your view of the text?  Personal experiences ◦ Connecting personal experiences to similar events from the text (i.e. loss of a loved one) makes the material more relatable  Connect new information to previous knowledge ◦ Building new information on top of what you already know is a technique known as “scaffolding.”
  • 12.
    Summary: If youcannot summarize what you have read, it is possible that you did not fully understand the material Successful annotations should always include:  Main ideas  Enumerated lists  Unfamiliar or important vocabulary
  • 13.
    No! It onlyhas to make sense to you! However, here are a few useful approaches:  Map, Cluster, or Web  Lists  Timeline
  • 14.
     Purdue UniversityCalumet Writing Center  WritingCenter@Purduecal.edu 219-989-2200  Writing Center Handouts ◦ http://www.pnc.edu/engl/writingcenter/handouts.html  Purdue OWL ◦ http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/  Developing Textbook Thinking by Sherrie L. Nist and William Diehl