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- Medical Student
Might as well just get a paint brush.What color do you use to highlight in FA? Do you highlight just the bold topics, catch phrases, etc? My preference is Yellow Highlighter on bold topics with red Pilot .05 underlining certain phrases.
I highlight more to visually differentiate between certain things. Some topics just don't have sufficient indentation or need an underline to separate from the discussion. It makes it easier to find certain topics quickly. So, in apoptosis I'd highlight "intrinsic pathway" and then 'extrinsic pathway" with two different colors and maybe highlight one key thing I tend to forget with each.
I also will color code if they have a bunch of topics on the left and then merge topics in the right side boxes....or if it just seems far away from the main part. It is really just an effort to visually tie things together and make it easier to track.
Side note, does anyone know of any pens that won't smudge but aren't crappy bics. I'm getting tired of placing pieces of paper between sheets so I don't get tons of smudging and printing when I go to the next page while listening to audio lectures and what not.
Yeah, not much point in highlighting. Don't waste your time.Never been a fan of highlighting. You have to know everything in FA, so why highlight?
Cool. I will have to look into both of those. I really like my pilot pens for most things, but they smudge all the time with that glossy coating in Goljan and FA (a little worse with Goljan probably) I have quite the collection of pens right now.
But yea, highlighting straight facts is pretty pointless. Like I said before, I do things I know I tend to forget or mix up...or that are deemed super high yield points when listening to board review audio type stuff. From a learning standpoint, it is also easier to learn with extra visual cues. I know it is done for space saving and conciseness, but my major problem with FA is how a lot of the information is crammed in rather than bulleted with a little space to write. I'd gladly suffer a slightly thicker book to give me more formal areas to annotate with the various topics. It is complete chaos right now...and I really don't even write much in it.
I recommend the "Ultra fine point Sharpies" for writing in FA or any other text book. One of my classmates suggested them to me last year and they are amazing. Literally a second after you finish writing you can wipe your finger over it and it is dry no matter how glossy the page you're writing on.
I got the binding stripped on mine and put into a binder. There were two problems with it, albeit minor ones. The first is that they did go far enough over with the cut, so many pages still have a little adhesive that I have slowly tease the pages apart. The other problem is that the paper is so friggin thin that I have to pay attention if flipping through while doing DIT stuff, otherwise I'll rip a page out.
This is probably the only time in my life that I've been organized with something.
1st pass I use yellow (and yes, I do end up covering a lot of the text).
2nd pass I use blue or pink. Yellow + blue = green; yellow + pink = orange. This is how I know I've gone over the material twice.
3rd pass gets a pen; I've often resorted to Bics since my usual favorite (uniball visions) smear like nothing else on FA/Goljan pages. However, Pilot also makes a line of pens called "Permaball", and they're essentially rollerball pens with indelible permanent ink. These work like a charm.
PS: I really wish they sold a loose-leaf, three hole-punched FA edition that you could drop straight in a binder, or maybe even a ledger-format edition that had tons of extra space for annotating.
I highlighted stuff in my final run through that I would need to look at again before the test. Just stuff that doesn't stick.