Comment Re:At My University (Score 1) 569
Perhaps you were the exception.
I never stopped taking notes in physics classes throughout my undergraduate and graduate coursework. As I recall, I wasn't the only one taking notes, either. Knowing, in general, how to setup and attack a problem is important, yes, and something you might be able to remember without writing things down. But learning how to put the right tools to use at the right time to make the mathematics produce something akin to a reasonable answer was something that required active note taking. For me and most of my classmates, anyway.
Past a certain point, tools like Maple and Mathematica weren't even very useful for the more difficult problems. Or even for the "easy" problems in certain frameworks. Having a detailed example of how to work through the mathematics as part of my class notes was never a detriment to my higher education.
Also, past a certain point, textbooks aren't so well refined from being used extensively like their undergraduate cousins. Many are written more like references than learning devices. A detailed example worked out in the classroom for the benefit of educating the audience was, to me, often more helpful than the reference material found in the text.
Of course, everyone's experience can be different.