I’ve fairly recently (over the past month or so) started taking notes on pretty much everything, as part of a drive to capture as much useful content in Evernote as possible. A lot of what I’m doing at the moment is probably quite wasteful, but I expect to figure out what is and isn’t useful in fairly short order.
For ebooks I’ve been making judicious use of highlighting on the Kindle. Unfortunately the UK Kindle service isn’t as feature-rich as the US counterpart, so I’m still looking into ways of parsing my clippings file into Evernote. For hardcopy books and lectures, I’ve taken to either writing bullet-pointed lists or mini-essays. This also seems to have the positive side-effects of forcing me to clearly elucidate on ideas I’ve just taken in, and stopping me ruminating on the areas in question.
For example, late last night I was reading about the concept of “burden of proof” in legal and rhetorical contexts. This is a bit of a personal bugbear, and I ended up writing several hundred words informed by what I was reading. Not only can I now reference this when necessary, but it stopped me from trying to sleep with a bunch of proactive burden-of-proof-related arguments running through my head.
I’ve fairly recently (over the past month or so) started taking notes on pretty much everything, as part of a drive to capture as much useful content in Evernote as possible. A lot of what I’m doing at the moment is probably quite wasteful, but I expect to figure out what is and isn’t useful in fairly short order.
For ebooks I’ve been making judicious use of highlighting on the Kindle. Unfortunately the UK Kindle service isn’t as feature-rich as the US counterpart, so I’m still looking into ways of parsing my clippings file into Evernote. For hardcopy books and lectures, I’ve taken to either writing bullet-pointed lists or mini-essays. This also seems to have the positive side-effects of forcing me to clearly elucidate on ideas I’ve just taken in, and stopping me ruminating on the areas in question.
For example, late last night I was reading about the concept of “burden of proof” in legal and rhetorical contexts. This is a bit of a personal bugbear, and I ended up writing several hundred words informed by what I was reading. Not only can I now reference this when necessary, but it stopped me from trying to sleep with a bunch of proactive burden-of-proof-related arguments running through my head.