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The main goal of smart note-taking is not to stay informed. It’s to increase understanding and build your knowledge base, which you can apply to your creative projects and productive work.
You learn best when you connect ideas and evaluate the information. Does this confirm, contradict, or add to your existing knowledge? Have you mastered the subject enough to explain it or teach it to others through a presentation, an article, or a paper? How will your knowledge hold up in a test or in a real-world situation?
In episode 17 of The Incrementalist podcast, you will learn:
1) The difference between being familiar with a subject and actually knowing it
2) Why writing is a core part of the thinking process, i.e. the medium in which you think and not the outcome of your thinking
3) The Zettelkasten slip box method for smart note-taking, which was invented by Niklas Lumaan -- a German sociologist who published at least 58 books and nearly 400 scholarly articles on various topics
4) The three types of notes to make -
5) The "reference slip box" is for source citations and brief notes while the "main slip box" is for permanent notes
6) The profound benefits of having an external system for note-taking and managing knowledge
Resources cited:
Music by:
Dyan Williams
Check out the book: The Incrementalist, A Simple Productivity System to Create Big Results in Small Steps
Visit website: www.dyanwilliams.com
Subscribe to productivity e-newsletter
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The main goal of smart note-taking is not to stay informed. It’s to increase understanding and build your knowledge base, which you can apply to your creative projects and productive work.
You learn best when you connect ideas and evaluate the information. Does this confirm, contradict, or add to your existing knowledge? Have you mastered the subject enough to explain it or teach it to others through a presentation, an article, or a paper? How will your knowledge hold up in a test or in a real-world situation?
In episode 17 of The Incrementalist podcast, you will learn:
1) The difference between being familiar with a subject and actually knowing it
2) Why writing is a core part of the thinking process, i.e. the medium in which you think and not the outcome of your thinking
3) The Zettelkasten slip box method for smart note-taking, which was invented by Niklas Lumaan -- a German sociologist who published at least 58 books and nearly 400 scholarly articles on various topics
4) The three types of notes to make -
5) The "reference slip box" is for source citations and brief notes while the "main slip box" is for permanent notes
6) The profound benefits of having an external system for note-taking and managing knowledge
Resources cited:
Music by:
Dyan Williams
Check out the book: The Incrementalist, A Simple Productivity System to Create Big Results in Small Steps
Visit website: www.dyanwilliams.com
Subscribe to productivity e-newsletter