If you are used to lecturing from pre-made documents or PowerPoints, then OneNote is an easy way to get an electronic copy of those notes and what you have written on them during the lecture. I have all of my lecture notes in Word documents. If I insert them into OneNote using the "insert" and "file as printouts" command, I get the whole document loaded into OneNote. One problem I've found with this is if I need extra space for writing on my document - I can't get it. One solution is to create a PowerPoint of your notes and then insert "file as printouts" in OneNote. Each slide comes in individually and then you are able to add space as needed to work out the problem or explain more on each slide. Once you have finished the lecture click file and publish as pdf - then you will have the original PowerPoint along with the annotations you made during the lecture.
One thing I have not figured out is if there is a way to quickly get the equation editor into PowerPoint. You can find it under insert, objection and the microsoft equation 3.0 - but I wish I could do that with just one click. Any way here is a video of what I have just described oneNote and power point
1 comments:
Sorry to disappoint you, but I read that the ability to add equation editor to the quick access toolbar is not available in Powerpoint 2007. Apparently you can create a macro that will allow you to do it, but by the time I figure that out, I could create hundreds of equations by accessing the editor as is.
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