If you are reading for class, make sure to read any questions, summaries, or introductions to the material that the class teacher has prepared. Reading over notes from previous classes and lectures will help place your reading in context before you begin taking notes.
If you are reading for an independent research paper (rather than to prepare for class) start with overviews, reviews, introductory texts to get the basics. Then work your way to more complex material.
In both cases, follow this sequence.
Step-by-step notetaking
(1) Start with what you know. Write down or copy-paste the main questions from the lecture into your notes document, along with any key terms or phrases. The goal of reading is to explore the ideas already introduced to you by your professors and to fill in the frameworks they’ve provided with rich case studies and examples.
(2) Cite the source, in JRAI format, using referencing software like Zotero, Mendeley, or CiteThisForMe. Just do it! You’ll thank yourself later.
(3) Write down anything you know already about the author and connections to other anthropologists or fields of study. Think, what led them to write this article, and what might their goals be in writing? Who are they writing for?
(4) Read the abstract (copy-paste it, if you want) and rephrase the key argument in your own words. The abstract is a key tool for refreshing your memory of the article weeks or months later. Note the fieldsite and any key terms the author mentions.
(5) Read the introduction and think about how the author is locating themselves in a theoretical tradition or inserting themselves into an ongoing conversation between anthropologists. Don’t spend too much time writing down who said what, but do note down the main ways the author differentiates their methods or findings from others’.
(6) For each of the main headings (can copy-paste these), write down one or two bullet points on the main ideas. It helps to read the whole section before writing anything at all. It might help to ask yourself:
What three keywords summarise what this section is about?
In your own words, what was this section about? Write as if you are telling a non-specialist what you are reading.
What evidence does the author draw upon?
(7) Once you’ve read the whole article, skim back over your highlights and bulk up your notes with the most memorable and relevant examples.
Note your impressions of the strengths and weaknesses of the author’s argument and/or motivation.
Think about the relevance – e.g. how does this compare to the other readings?