2) Cornell-inspired note-taking paper with topics in the left margin and speaker names/notes/sub-topics in the main body. There's room for mind maps if you wish.
3) Actions go in the bottom field so they are easy to find later and mark off when done. If you need to reference something in the body notes for follow-up or action (because you don't have time to write something at the bottom of the page), put an A in a circle next to the relevant sentence.
4) Meeting notes are stapled together and filed in chronological order in a ring binder, divided by working group/meeting name or topic. You can then remove a bunch of notes from previous meetings to take into the current one for reference.
1) Use no tech.
2) Cornell-inspired note-taking paper with topics in the left margin and speaker names/notes/sub-topics in the main body. There's room for mind maps if you wish.
3) Actions go in the bottom field so they are easy to find later and mark off when done. If you need to reference something in the body notes for follow-up or action (because you don't have time to write something at the bottom of the page), put an A in a circle next to the relevant sentence.
4) Meeting notes are stapled together and filed in chronological order in a ring binder, divided by working group/meeting name or topic. You can then remove a bunch of notes from previous meetings to take into the current one for reference.
Here's a Word doc of my blank Cornell-type paper:
https://github.com/linker3000/Cornell