I don't take notes, never have. I use OneNote, and every semster I make a new folder for each class, but ever semster at the end they are all empty. Just never been an auditory learner.
Quote from: Matthies on February 28, 2009, 11:30:16 AMI don't take notes, never have. I use OneNote, and every semster I make a new folder for each class, but ever semster at the end they are all empty. Just never been an auditory learner. Yeah, I take some notes in class, but it's mostly just to fit in. I hardly ever end up consulting my notes when it's time to study/outline. I usually just go through the textbook when I outline, copying and pasting class notes in sometimes.
Quote from: "That One" on February 27, 2009, 06:32:05 PMI don't get how people survive class without the internet to take away the moments of boredom. In all honesty class is useless. Most of my professors play hide the ball and confuse more than help. Only one of my professors holds meaningful class discussions. The others feed us mindless dribble, and in between the bull pull out points of relevant law that you already know (if you were smart enough to buy commercial outlines). People are going to say that you need to learn how your professor tests, and i will say in retort "that is what practice tests and office hours are for."+1In my crim pro class we use the Dressler textbook. I read Dressler's Understanding Crim Pro before class and I've usually already read what the professor talks about. Many professors don't provide much additional info than the textbook/supplement has. This is especially true for 1L classes because most professors don't specialize in torts or contracts...they specialize in some crazy area and just have to teach these classes.
I don't get how people survive class without the internet to take away the moments of boredom. In all honesty class is useless. Most of my professors play hide the ball and confuse more than help. Only one of my professors holds meaningful class discussions. The others feed us mindless dribble, and in between the bull pull out points of relevant law that you already know (if you were smart enough to buy commercial outlines). People are going to say that you need to learn how your professor tests, and i will say in retort "that is what practice tests and office hours are for."
My computer recently died and I'm looking at getting a replacement. I can get Microsoft Office Professional for a pretty cheap price, but it doesn't come with OneNote. Do you think OneNote is really that necessary of a program for law school or would Word just suffice?
how do you manage to pay attention with internet? We have internet blocked so I usually Chess, Hearts, Pinball, whatever, and even those activities can be too distracting.
It depends on your goals. If you just want median, MS Word should be fine. If you're shooting for top 10%, I'd use OneNote.
It's the type of comments such as the one quoted above that makes law school challenging. People try to psych you out into doing things a certain way. I didn't even outline for classes. Study what works for you, some people take notes on the computer, some in a notepad, and some do great/bad with each method. I assure you it won't make a significant difference.