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Learning Strategies: GED Test Prep (page 3)

By LearningExpress Editors
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Making Notes

Making notes is often as important as taking notes. Making notes means that you respond to what you read. There are several ways you can respond (talk back) to the text:

  • Write questions. If you come across something you don't understand, write a question. What does this mean? Why did the author choose this word? Why is this the best title? How is this different from previous examples? Why is the information in thischart important? What was the impact of this discovery? Then, answer all your questions.
  • Make connections. Any time you make connections between ideas, you improve your chances of remembering that material. For example, if you are studying the Industrial Revolution, you might make connections between a number of key inventions by imagining how cotton might move from a farm in Georgia to a shirt in a British store: cotton gin, steamboat, steam engine.
  • Similarly, when you are reviewing the Constitution, you might make a connection between the Nineteenth Amendment (granting women the right to vote) and your only female cousin's age (she's 19). (If you then picture your 19-yearold cousin in a 1920s flapper outfit in a voting booth, you'll have a much better chance of remembering which amendment granted women the right to vote.)

  • Write your reactions. Your reactions work much like connections, and they can help you remember information. For example, if you are reviewing the Constitution, you might note the following:
  • Why did it take 50 years after the Fifteenth Amendment, granting people of all races the right to vote, for the Nineteenth Amendment, granting both genders the right to vote, to be passed?

Outlining and Mapping Information

Outlines are great tools, especially for sequential learners. They help you focus on what's most important by making it easier to review key ideas and see relationships among those ideas. With an outline, you can see how supporting information is related to main ideas.

The basic outline structure is this:

  1. Topic
    1. Main idea
      1. Major supporting idea
        1. Minor supporting idea
          1. Additional supportive information

Outlines can have many layers and variations, but this is the general form. Here are the notes for animal cell structure presented in outline format:

Animal Cell Structure

  1. Three parts: plasma membrane, cytoplasm, nucleus
    1. Plasma membrane
      1. Isolates cell from the environment
      2. Regulates movement of materials in and out of cell
      3. Communicates with other cells
    2. Cytoplasm
      1. Includes water, salts, and enzymes that catalyze reactions
      2. Contains organelles
        1. Example: mitochondrion, which captures energy from food molecules
    3. Nucleus
      1. Nuclear Envelope
        1. Isolates nucleus (like plasma membrane)
      2. Nuclear Pores
        1. Regulate the passage of materials into the nucleus
          1. Water, ions, proteins, and RNA
        2. Controls flow of information to and from DNA
      3. Chromatin
        1. Clusters of DNA and associated proteins
      4. Nucleolus
        1. Site of ribosome assembly

Mapping information is similar to making an outline.The difference is that maps are less structured. You don't have to organize ideas from top to bottom. Instead, with a map, the ideas can go all over the page. The key is that you still show how the ideas are related. The next page shows the same example in a map instead of an outline.

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