![]() ![]() My Evernote folder for my Graduate School documents has every document I have scanned to PDF place in here, including graded papers, announcements, random notes, etc. With a note limit size of 25 MBs (premium users get a 50 MB limit), you can attach several versions of the same document on a single note (although you may want to put the date or time in the file name). I dump EVERYTHING that has ever had a use in its life – whether I think I will ever need it again – into Evernote. If I’m about to radically modify a file, I archive a version of it to my Evernote to make sure I can recover it later if I mess up my file. This is an example of how I have used Evernote to write papers Never Again: The Past I then change the text into my own wording while still giving credit to my original source. ![]() I use check-boxes to indicate what information I have cited and also include the APA citation next to aforementioned information piece so that I can easily cite it when I transfer the note to my document. Often, literature I am reviewing will get tagged as I find out the subject matter that is being addressed in the article. Here are examples of tags I have used for my literature reviews: Tags are sort of like a one or few word phrase that tells you what is in the note you created. For example, if were to create one notebook for your literature review, you can put your notes for each article you read on separate notes and tag each note with an identifier you can pull up later. Where Evernote comes in handy is in creating separate notebooks for notes you’ll later be referencing in the future. Most of the note-taking I have done in Evernote is to serve me at a later point in time. ![]() Documents for Later Use: Working for Tomorrow I rely on Evernote for two reasons: Note-Taking and Archiving. ![]()
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