How to Take Smart Notes

One Simple Technique to Boost Writing, Learning and Thinking – for Students, Academics and Nonfiction Book Writers

Tapa blanda, 176 páginas

Idioma English

Publicado el 23 de febrero de 2017 por CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform.

ISBN:
978-1-5428-6650-7
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4 estrellas (6 reseñas)

An informational book that describes and advocates for the note taking system of the German sociologist Niklas Luhmann. The author's primary claim is that Luhmann's system of keeping a slip-box (or "zettelkasten") full of interesting ideas and bibliographic references can help students, academics, and non-fiction writers be more productive.

6 ediciones

Really liked it

4 estrellas

I have mixed feelings about this book. It's well-written on a small scale (pages, chapters) but the overall structure is a mystery to me.

Did I find a way how to organize a mess in my notes? Not exactly, but I've found some good hints.

Good bits:

  • GTD doesn't work for non-linear writing. Academic writing is non-linear. I was taught otherwise.
  • Organize your notes around the context in which they're going to be useful. Not by topic. Organizing by topic is almost the same as organizing them by year. Looks neat, but it's hard to find a note you need right now.
  • Quotes are useless. If you need to apply the information you've found somewhere, rewrite it in your own words.
  • Brainstorming is useless. Sure, it produces ideas, but they're going to be of a very low quality.

Bad bits:

  • There's a lot of barely related information. The book tries …

Excellent reference of Luhmann's zettlekasten system

4 estrellas

The subtitle describes the book well, in that the book is aimed to students, academics, and book writers. While a great source of knowledge around Luhmann's zettlekasten and the theory around it, it does spend a lot of time focusing on the academic side of the system.

Dr. Ahrens breaks down the key parts of Luhmann's system, how to implement it yourself, and points out new starter pitfalls by directing you to understand that it is a system of note-taking, not a component part that you can easily integrate.

Worthy of a read if you're interested in PKM, knowledge management, and note taking.

Review of 'How to Take Smart Notes' on 'Goodreads'

3 estrellas

This book is really interesting and I will definitely work on implementing some kind of Zettelkasten, Evergreen notes (notes.andymatuschak.org/z3SjnvsB5aR2ddsycyXofbYR7fCxo7RmKW2be) or other PKM solution.

The book is small, the idea is interesting, but the reading is cumbersome. As with many other "How to" books it is repetitive in form and in content. I think the base ideas are outlined in the first 30 pages and repeated with examples in the next 150 pages. And the examples are repeated two and three times.

There are a gazillion blog posts about this that resume it in a 10 minutes read. If you only want to implement your Zettelkasten better go for them. The book is good as a source of references and bibliography.