The
information below is available in the DSS office as handouts to
give to your volunteer notetakers on how to use the carbonless
notetaker paper and how to take good notes and how to your professors
help you et good class notes. There is also a letter for faculty
on helping your student with a disability in finding a volunteer
notetaker. You can also print these pages, or you can download
here:
Microsoft
Word format (.doc)  |
PDF
format (.pdf)  |
| |
|
To
Volunteer Notetakers:
As a student
you know how important it is to have good notes. Thank
you for helping a classmate with a disability by sharing
your notes!
If you have any questions, please contact Les Lichter at Disability
Support Services (240-567-5060).
To make this
process as convenient for you as possible and as useful for the
recipient as possible, please consider the following:
How to
use the carbonless-copy paper:
By itself:
Use two sheets. If you write on the top sheet, the writing transfers
to the bottom sheet. You keep the top sheet and give the bottom
sheet to the student with a disability or to your teacher to
pass on to the student.
With
your own notebook: You can use your own notebook paper.
Just put two sheets of the carbonless-copy paper under your
own notebook sheet. The first sheet of the carbonless-copy paper
will act as the ink transfer; the second sheet will be the copy
of your notes that you will give to the student. Press down
firmly! When you turn to your next notebook page, you can re-use
the first sheet of copy paper, but remember to add a second
sheet of copy paper on top of it. When
you need more copy paper, just ask your teacher or the student.
What the
student hopes to see in your notes:
On each
page, please write the Date, Course Number, and Page Number
of the notes (for example, page 1 of 4; page 2 of 4; page 3
of 4; page 4 of 4). Please
write legibly, preferably in pen.
Please
write down all assignments and due dates, as well as anything
written on the board.
Please
write down the primary and secondary points, any key terms
or concepts. Everyone takes notes differently, but good
notes do have certain aspects in common. We have found that
good notes use headings and subheadings and follow
a logical sequence. We have also found that useful notes give
some details to flesh out the main points.
In the Accommodations
Letter that you have just been given by a student with a disability,
you will find the recommendation of "peer notes." The student
will discuss with you whether he/she wishes to make a request
to the class for volunteer note takers and to receive the notes
directly, or whether he or she prefers you to make an announcement
and to collect the notes after class for him/her.
If you make
the announcement, you may find it helpful to read the following
statement to your class. Once two volunteers are secured, please
distribute to the volunteers the blue note taker instruction letters
along with the carbonless-copy paper the student will supply.
Sample
announcement:
"Disability
Support Services is asking for two or three students from this
class to volunteer to share their notes with a classmate with
a disability. Students with a disability attend class regularly;
however their disability may interfere their ability to take
notes. They may not be able to take their own notes because
they may have to watch a sign language interpreter closely,
they may have low vision or have very limited use of their hands,
or they may have difficulty listening and writing at the same
time."
"Disability
Support Services would like to stress two points. First, it's
very convenient to be a volunteer note taker. You never have
to give up your notebook or visit the Disability Support office
for xeroxing. All you have to do is use the loose-leaf carbonless-copy
paper provided, which can be used by itself or with your own
notebook paper. I will hand out blue instruction letters explaining
all this to the volunteers. If you prefer to type your notes
or do it some other way DSS can work this out with you."
"Second,
please don't feel that you have to be the best note taker in
the world to volunteer. We're looking for people who write legibly,
get the main points, and want to help."
Thank you
for your assistance! If you have questions about the student's
accommodation, please call the counselor listed on the Accommodations
Letter. If you have questions about this procedure, please
call
Les Lichter at Disability Support Services (240-567-5060).
These
handouts were developed by Marjorie Raley in the DSS Learning
Center.