Keep them until college is over, then toss them. There are some classes that bring together bits of knowledge from foundational courses you’ll need to review, but once you get out into the real world, none of it matters.
Notes for my major or minor I would go through, look at the courses I had yet to take, and keep the pages that would be good background, minus those that were from the textbook (assuming it had a decent index). Kept the textbooks that provided the basic information as overview to jog my memory and anything that I could use as a reference in a paper for a later class. For gen ed, depended on how much the study applied to what I’d be doing and how quickly I’d need the information if it came up.
Boots at the Boar Premium Member over 9 years ago
Keep them until college is over, then toss them. There are some classes that bring together bits of knowledge from foundational courses you’ll need to review, but once you get out into the real world, none of it matters.
Retired Dude over 9 years ago
She’s in the early stages of becoming a hoarder.
kattbailey over 9 years ago
Notes for my major or minor I would go through, look at the courses I had yet to take, and keep the pages that would be good background, minus those that were from the textbook (assuming it had a decent index). Kept the textbooks that provided the basic information as overview to jog my memory and anything that I could use as a reference in a paper for a later class. For gen ed, depended on how much the study applied to what I’d be doing and how quickly I’d need the information if it came up.