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Fast Facts for Faculty
Guided Notes
IMPROVING THE EFFECTIVENESS OF YOUR LECTURES
Developed by William L. Heward
The Ohio
State University
Partnership Grant
Improving the Quality of Education for Students with
Disabilities
What Are Guided
Notes?
Guided notes are instructor-prepared handouts that
provide all students with background information and standard cues with
specific spaces to write key facts, concepts, and/or relationships during the
lecture. {See example on page 5}. Guided notes (GN)
require students to actively respond during the lecture, improve the accuracy
and efficiency of students' notetaking, and increase
students' retention of course content. GN can help organize and enhance
lecture content in any discipline or subject area. Instructors can develop GN
for a single lecture, for one or more units within a course, or for an entire
semester-long course. GN follow the principles of
Universal Design for learning-they improve learning for all students.
Some Pros and
Cons of the Lecture Method
Lecturing is one of the most widely used teaching
methods in higher education. The format is simple and straightforward: the
instructor talks (and illustrates, demonstrates, etc.) and students are held
responsible for obtaining, remembering, and using the most important content
from the lecture at a later time-most often on a quiz or an exam.
Advantages of lecturing.
Although some educators consider the lecture method
outdated and ineffective, it offers several advantages and reasons for its
continued use (Barbetta & Scaruppa,
1995; Michael, 1994).
- Lecturing
is an efficient use of the instructor's time. A good lecture can be presented from one
semester to the next, reducing subsequent planning and preparation time
to review and update.
- Lecturing
is versatile. It can be used with
large or small groups, for any curriculum area, and can last from a few
minutes to several hours.
- The
instructor has complete control of course content. When lecturing, the instructor has complete
control over the level of detail and degree of emphasis with which
course content is covered.
- Lecturing
enables coverage of content not available in published form. For example, findings from just-completed or
on-going research projects may be presented to students via lecture.
- The
lecture method can be used to supplement or elaborate course content. Content that is particularly important or
difficult for students to learn directly through text-, web-, or
field-based activities can be highlighted during the lecture.
- The
lecture method provides flexibility. The instructor can probe students' understanding and make
on-the-spot adjustments to the lecture if warranted.
- Lectures
can be personalized. Instructors
can customize lectures to meet students' interests and backgrounds.
- Lectures
can be motivating for students.
Students can see and hear their instructor's level of enthusiasm for and
commitment to the discipline.
Disadvantages
of lecturing.
The lecture method also poses some significant
challenges for students and instructors.
- Course
content is often presented via lecture in unorganized and uneven
fashion. This makes it difficult
for students to determine the most important aspects of the lecture
(i.e., What's going to be on the exam?).
- Students
can be passive observers. The
typical lecture does not require students to actively participate. One
of the most consistent and important educational research findings is
that students who make frequent, relevant responses during a lesson
learn more than students who are passive observers. (Brophy
& Good, 1986; Fisher & Berliner, 1985; Greenwood, Delquadri, & Hall, 1984).
- Many college
students do not know how to take effective notes. Although various strategies and formats for
effective notetaking have been identified
(e.g., Saski, Swicegood,
& Carter, 1983), notetaking is seldom
taught to students.
- The
listening, language, and/or motor skill deficits of some students with
disabilities make it difficult for them to identify important lecture
content and write it down correctly and quickly enough during a lecture. While writing one concept in his notebook,
the student with learning disabilities might miss the next two points
(Hughes & Suritsky, 1994).
- Instructors
sometimes get off-track from the primary objectives of the lecture. Professors-especially those who really know
and love their disciplines-are famous (infamous!) for going off on
tangents during lecture. Although anecdotes are interesting and provide
enriching context, they can make it difficult for even the most skilled notetakers to determine the most important content.
Why Use Guided Notes?
- Students
produce complete and accurate lecture notes. Students who take accurate notes and study
them later consistently receive higher test scores than students who
only listen to the lecture and read the text (Baker & Lombardi,
1985; Carrier, 1983; Kierwa, 1987; Norton
& Hartley, 1986). Inaccurate and incomplete lecture notes are of
limited value for subsequent study. GN help level the playing field
between students with and without good notetaking
skills.
- Guided
Notes increase students' active engagement with course content. To complete their GN, students must actively
respond to the lecture's content by listening, looking, thinking, and
writing.
Guided notes take advantage of one
of the most consistent and important findings in recent educational research:
students who make frequent, lesson-relevant responses learn more than
students who are passive observers.
- Students
can more easily identify the most important information. Because GN cue the
location and number of key concepts, facts, and/or relationships,
students are better able to determine if they are getting the most
important content.
"Guided notes are wonderful,
especially during a lecture. They clue you in on what is important." - College
student with learning disabilities.
- Students
are more likely to ask the instructor questions. Austin, Gilbert, Thibeault,
Carr, and Bailey (in press) found that students in an introductory
psychology course asked more questions and made more comments during
lectures when Guided notes were used than they did during lectures when
taking their own notes.
- Students
earn higher quiz and exam scores with GN. Experimental studies have consistently found that students
across all achievement levels those with and without disabilities-earn
higher test scores when using guided notes than they earn when taking
their own notes (Austin et al., in press; Heward,
1994; Lazarus, 1993)
- GN
can serve as an advance organizer for students. Some students have indicated that they
benefit from reviewing the lecture topics prior to attending class.
- Instructors
must prepare the lecture carefully.
Constructing GN requires instructors to examine the sequence and
organization of lecture content.
- Instructors
are more likely to stay on-task with the lecture's content and sequence. Because GN let students know what's supposed
to come next, instructors are less likely to stray from the planned
content. And if and when an instructor does wander, students know that
the information is, at most, supporting context or enrichment, and not
critical course content for which they will be held responsible.
- GN
help instructors prioritize and limit lecture content. Many instructors pack too much information
into their lectures. While this tendency is understandable -instructors
want their students to learn as much as possible-when it comes to how much
new lecture content students can learn and retain, less can be more
(Nelson, 2001; Russell, Hendricson, &
Herbert, 1984). Constructing GN requires decisions about what is most
important for students to learn.
- GN
content can be easily converted into test/exam questions.
- Students
like GN and appreciate instructors who prepare them. Students appreciate and give positive
evaluation ratings to instructors who develop and provide GN.
"Last
semester I developed guided notes for my two lecture-based courses, and the
feedback I received from students was very positive. Several of my colleagues
told me students in their classes asked if they would start using guided
notes, too." - Faculty member in psychology department.
Two FAQs About Guided Notes
Q: Isn't providing
students--especially college students-with guided notes making it too easy
for them? Are we just "spoon-feeding" them the information?
A: To complete their guided
notes students must actively respond-by looking, listening, thinking, and writing
about critical content-throughout the lecture. We make it too easy for
students when we teach in ways that let them sit passively during class.
Q: Why not just pass out an
outline of my lecture or a copy of the guided notes already completed?
A: Distributing completed
guided notes reduces the necessity for students to think and respond during
class, or even to attend class at all.
Guidelines for
Constructing and Using Guided Notes
Constructing GN is easy; especially for lectures that
have been developed previously.
- Examine
existing lecture outlines (or create them as necessary) to identify the
most important course content that students must learn and retain via
lecture. Remember: less can be
more. Student learning is enhanced by lectures with fewer points
supported by additional examples and opportunities for students to
respond to questions or scenarios (Russell et al., 1984).
- Delete
the key facts, concepts, and relationships from the lecture outline,
leaving the remaining information to provide structure and context for
students' notetaking.
- Insert
formatting cues such as asterisks, lines, and bullets to show students
where, when, and how many facts or concepts to write. For example, the box below might be included
on the first page of GN.
Explanation of Symbols in Guided Notes
   
Write a definition, concept, key point, or procedure next
to each bullet, asterisk, star, or numbered circle.
__________
Fill-in blank lines with a word or phrase to complete a
definition, concept, key point, or procedure.
   
The pointing finger comes into play when you review and
study your notes after class. It is a prompt to think of and write your own
example(s) of a concept or idea for applying a particular strategy.
Big Idea 
Big ideas are statements or concepts with wide-ranging
implications for understanding and/or applying course content.
- Use
PowerPoint slides or overhead transparencies to project key content. Visually projecting the key facts,
definitions, concepts, relationships, etc. that students must write in
their GN helps ensure that all students access the most critical content
and improves the pace of the lecture.
- Leave
ample space for students to write.
Providing about three to four times the space needed to type the content
will generally leave enough room for students' handwriting.
- Do not
require students to write too much.
Using GN should not unduly slow down the pace of the lecture. Two
studies found that students' exam scores for lectures taught with GN
that could be completed with single words and short phrases were as high
as their test scores over lectures taught with GN that required more
extensive writing to complete (Austin & Sasson,
2001; Courson, 1989).
- Enhance
GN with supporting information, resources, and additional response
opportunities. Consider inserting
diagrams, illustrations, photos, highlighted statements or concepts that
are particularly important (e.g., Big Ideas), and resources such as
bibliographies and websites into GN. Sets of questions or practice problems
interspersed within GN give students additional opportunities to respond
and receive instructor feedback during the lecture.
- Make
GN available to students via course website and/or photocopied course
packets. Many instructors are
understandably concerned that making their lecture notes available prior
to class will reduce attendance because students will assume the notes
contain all the information they need. However, distributing GN before
class may give students an incentive to attend class in order to
complete the notes.
Guided
Notes for Portion of a Lecture in a Graduate Course for Special Education
Teachers
Boldface italic font
shows parts completed by students during lecture.
II. FIVE GUIDING PRINCIPLES FOR PROMOTING GENERALIZED
OUTCOMES
1. Eliminate the need for generality as much as possible.
A. Prioritize the
settings in which the learner will most
often function.
In addition to the learner's current environment(s),
consider the
environments in which the learner will
function in the immediate future, and later in life.
B. Prioritize the
knowledge and skills that will frequently be
required of the learner.
Why? Because you cannot teach
everything (or even every aspect of any one skill).
The most important skill-setting combinations should always be taught directly
Don't relegate the most critical outcomes to the
not-for-certain technology of generalization programming.
2. Probe for generalized outcomes before,
during, and after instruction.
A. A generalization probe is a direct and objective assessment of the
learner's use of the target skill in a non-training setting or situation.
EX: We can assess the extent to which a student has
generalized the skill of solving two-digit minus two-digit arithmetic
problems with regrouping by presenting her with problems of the same type on
which she has not received any instruction or guided practice.
student writes another example here when reviewing notes after
class
B. Generalization probes can often be made more
efficient by contriving meaningful opportunities for the
learner to use her new knowledge or skill.
EX: Instead of waiting for (and perhaps missing)
naturally occurring opportunities for the learner to use her new
conversational skills in the generality environment, enlist the assistance of
a "confederate" peer to approach the learner.
student writes another example here when reviewing notes after
class
C. Probing for generalization before instruction provides 3
important kinds of information.
1. Probes prior to teaching might reveal that the
learner already performs some or all of the
components of the target skill in the generality setting, thereby lessening
the teaching task.
2. Probes prior to teaching are the only objective way
to know if learner's performance of the target knowledge/skill after instruction truly is a G.O.
3. Probes prior to teaching enable observation of the contingencies
operating in the generality setting.
References &
Resources
Austin, J. L., Gilbert, M., Thibeault,
M., Carr, J. E., & Bailey, J. S. (in press). The effects of guided notes
on student responding and recall of information in a university classroom. Journal
of Behavioral Education.
Austin, J. L., & Sasson,
J. R. (2001). A comparison between long-form and short-form guided notes
in a university classroom. Manuscript submitted for publication.
Barbetta, P. M. , & Scaruppa,
C. L. (1995). Looking for a way to improve your behavior analysis lectures?
Try guided notes. The Behavior Analyst, 18, 155-160.
Courson, F. H. (1989). Differential effects of short- and
long-form guided notes on test scores and accuracy of note taking by learning
disabled and at-risk seventh grade students during social studies instruction.
Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, The Ohio State University, Columbus.
Carrier, C. A. (1983). Notetaking
research: Implications for the classroom. Journal of Instructional
Development, 6(3), 19-25.
Heward, W. L. (1994). Three "low-tech" strategies for
increasing the frequency of active student response during group instruction.
In R. Gardner, D. M. Sainato, J. O. Cooper, T. E.
Heron, W. L. Heward, J. Eshleman,
& T. A. Grossi (Eds.), Behavior analysis in
education: Focus on measurably superior instruction (pp. 283-320). Monterey, CA:
Brooks/Cole.
Hughes, C. A., & Suritsky,
S. K. (1994). Note-taking skills of university students with and without
learning disabilities. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 27, 20-24.
Kierwa, K. A. (1987). Notetaking and
review: The research and its implications. Instructional Science, 16,
233-249.
Lazarus, B. D. (1993). Guided notes: Effects with
secondary and post-secondary students with disabilities. Education and Treatment
of Children, 14, 272-289.
Michael, J. (1994). How to teach a college course.
Unpublished manuscript. Kalamazoo, MI: Western
Michigan University.
Nelson, C. (May, 2001). What is the most difficult step
we must take to become great teachers? National Teaching and Learning
Forum Newsletter, 10(4).
Norton, L. S., & Hartley, J. (1986). What factors
contribute to good examination marks? The role of notetaking
in subsequent examination performance. Higher Education, 15, 355-371.
Russell, I. J., Hendricson, W. D., & Herbert, R. J. (1984). Effects
of lecture information density on medical student achievement. Journal of
Medical Education, 59, 881-889.
About the Author
William L. Heward is
Professor of Special Education, School
of Physical Activity and
Educational Services, The Ohio State University. His current research
interests include "low tech" methods classroom teachers can use
during group instruction to increase student participation and achievement. Heward has collaborated on more than a dozen classroom
studies evaluating guided notes, and he uses guided notes in all of his
lecture-based courses. He received OSU's
Distinguished Teaching Award in 1985.
NOTE: This fact sheet is available in alternative
format upon request. Please call the Office for Disability Services at
614-292-3307. It is also available at http://www.ods.ohio-state.edu.
This publication is funded by the US
Department of Education under grant #P333A990046. For additional copies or
more information, please contact:
Margo Izzo, Ph.
D., Phone: 614-292-9218, Email: izzo.1@osu.edu
Ann Yurcisin, ED.S., Phone:
614-292-3307, Email: yurcisin.1@osu.edu
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