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Marking the Text & Annotating while Reading

Highlighting

  • Draw square blocks around the thesis and main points of the argument,
  • Underline key supporting points,
  • Circle key terms or vocabulary words and write the word in the margin,
  • Number anything that indicates a sequence or steps.

In the Margins

Here are some things you may want to write in the margins as you read:

  • Key concepts defined. Write an abbreviated definition,
  • Key relationships—cause-effect, problem-solution, sequence, etc.,
  • Short phrases explaining why a section was highlighted (underlined, circled, etc.),
  • References to other parts of the text “connects to…on page…”,
  • Questions, Predictions, Clarifications,
  • Summaries – 3-5 words,
  • Write longer summaries at the ends of sections,
  • Leave Breadcrumbs – list topics, subtopics, themes in the left-hand margin. This creates a trail of breadcrumbs, making reviewing easier and creating the opportunity to make connections among the different parts of the text.
  • Create a glossary of key words as you read. Every time you read a word you don’t know that seems important, write it down in your glossary. Be sure to write the page number and very short definition by each word in the glossary.

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