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Sloppy note-taking can really get you in trouble, so invest some time in taking careful notes.

Here's an old school note-taking method that people have been using for eons. Use this, adapt it, or develop your own system.

Anonymous student

Real Student Comment

If you use this method and do it correctly, you can't accidentally plagiarize. Like, it's impossible to mess up if you do this.

You'll need index cards, different colored pens/highlighters, and your sources.

Your cards could look something like this:

Quote

Giles' Role: Buffy 'relies on Giles not only for adult support and coaching, but also for the research necessary to do that for which the Slayer has been chosen'

Summary

Giles' Role: To help her fulfill her Slayer duties, Buffy can always turn to Giles

Paraphrase

Giles' Role: Despite his termination by the Watcher's Council in season three, Giles persists to teach and counsel Buffy while playing a 'father figure' role.

Your Own Ideas

Giles' Role: Giles' master research skills are as important and powerful as Buffy's strength-his books are as vital to defeating evil as Buffy's chest of weapons.

On the front of the card:

  1. In the upper left corner, color code the cards—use one color for quotes, another for summaries, another for paraphrases and another for your own thoughts. Or, you can write Q, S, P or Me.
  2. In the upper right corner, write the topic of the quote, summary, paraphrase or your original thought.
  3. In the center, write your quote (use quotation marks), summary, paraphrase or your original thought.

On the back of the card:

Write the citation, or some code for the citation info, DeCandido: 'Bibliographic Good vs. Evil in Buffy...' page 44 like the author's last name and first few words of the title. Include the page number(s) too. If you use a code, be sure to have the complete citation info somewhere for later use.

Using a note-taking system like this will help you:

  • quickly distinguish quotes, summaries, paraphrases and your thoughts from one another
  • organize your information—you can shuffle and categorize your note cards based on the topics you've assigned them and write your outline faster
  • easily work in your citations as you write

Need more? See Resources for UCLA Students.

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