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Laptops
Oh hey, I have another question.
Do many people bring their laptops to lectures for note-taking? I am an INCREDIBLY slow writer, but a fast typer and think I would benefit from that. When I went to a scholarship reception I talked to Jane Fee, a prof. in the department of linguistics, and she said that she despises laptops. I can't remember if she said she didn't allow people to use laptops in her lectures or if she just looks down upon it.
My questions are:
Do many people bring them?
Do any professors not allow you to use them?
Are there any sockets to plug your laptop into in lecture halls (if your laptop doesn't have very good battery life)?
In general, do you recommend the use of a laptop for notetaking during lectures?
Thanks
Do many people bring their laptops to lectures for note-taking? I am an INCREDIBLY slow writer, but a fast typer and think I would benefit from that. When I went to a scholarship reception I talked to Jane Fee, a prof. in the department of linguistics, and she said that she despises laptops. I can't remember if she said she didn't allow people to use laptops in her lectures or if she just looks down upon it.
My questions are:
Do many people bring them?
Do any professors not allow you to use them?
Are there any sockets to plug your laptop into in lecture halls (if your laptop doesn't have very good battery life)?
In general, do you recommend the use of a laptop for notetaking during lectures?
Thanks
Comments
As far as I know, no.
A few. The newer lecture halls have more.
No. I lost count of how many lectures I've wasted because of my laptop. It's better to be following the class and thinking critically. I've found it's more useful to go to class with no laptop and pay attention rather than try to copy down every single word the prof says. It gets boring, and the temptation to use teh internets is too great.
I haven't run into profs who won't allow it. But like Ether said, don't waste your lecture. I still take general notes, but mostly I will have my laptop closed during the lecture. Some course also come with a lot of online material and since I don't like printing excess shit out, I just use the trusty laptop.
I dunno about burnaby, but they are definitely in short supply.
A laptop can be helpful maybe if you don't get distracted from the lecture. I've only had a couple of profs who didn't like laptops.
My calculus teacher outright never wanted to see them (not that you'd need one for calculus, or if you would you would use a tablet pc.. probably... which a few people did)
I find that they help as long as you don't get distracted by the internet. When I can't get a seat by an outlet I turn my wireless connection off to save some energy and resist tempation a bit.
You should learn to write faster, lol.
But laptops are really not needed. Definitely a distration as Ether mentioned.
Depends on the prof too... but always seem to get all my notes and I'm not the fastest writer. If you missed something you can just ask the person beside you, that's what I do.
Some profs will give you online notes, and some won't. You have to decide whether or not it is necessary. For me, if there are no online notes and the prof has a lot of slides then I will bring my laptop. However, if there are online notes, I would most likely print them out and jot down additional information.