Writing A Minutes of Meeting
Writing A Minutes of Meeting
Writing A Minutes of Meeting
Learning objective:
After studying this information sheet, the trainee will be able to write an
effective minutes of meeting.
for the Quality Assurance office by the end of this month, the organization
should look into converting Lab 1. After the brief discussion, the
committee agreed.
Committee member, Richard Diocena attended the Meeting on PAASCU
Accreditation Updates. Mr. Diocena discussed the changes and updates in
the accreditation procedures.
Sr. Delia Alcabasa mentioned that the documentation of every department
on the teachers and students community involvement is 80% complete,
Unfinished business:
Finance Committee report provided by Chair, Ms. Marion Pescasiosa:
Pescsiosa explained that consultant, Marry Tusca, reviewed the
organization's bookkeeping procedures and found them to be satisfactory,
in preparation for the upcoming yearly financial audit. Finance committee
suggests that our company ensure the auditor provides a management
letter along with the audit financial report.
New business:
New information system
Mr. Noli Reterio noted that he was working with staff member, Edward
Gumban, to help develop an information management systems plan, and
that two weeks ago he (Resterio) had mailed members three resumes from
consultants to help with the plan. In the mailing, Resterio asked members
for their opinions to help select a consultant. Porter asked members for
their opinions. (NOTE: Zevon noted that she was also a computer
consultant and was concerned about conflict of interest in her Board role
regarding this selection, and asked to be ABSTAINED from this selection.
Members agreed.) The majority of members agreed on Lease-or-Buy
Consultants. MOTION to use Lease-or-Buy Consultants; seconded and
passed.
Announcements:
Ms. Carolina Gonzales announced that the graduates of the College of
1994 are donating P 200,000.00 for the rehabilitation of the College Gym.
Adjournment: The meeting was adjourned at 4:00 pm.
John Robert Vega
Date of approval:
way you wont need to scramble to understand whats going on while youre
recording notes.
Decide how you want to record your notes. If you arent comfortable
relying on your pen and notepad, try using a tape recorder or, if youre a fast
typist, take a laptop to the meeting.
Create a template for recording the meeting minutes and make sure to
leave some blank space to record your notes. Include the following information:
Date and time of the meeting
The purpose of the meeting
The meeting lead or chairs name
Assigned action items
Decisions made
2. During the Meeting. Check off names on your attendee list as they
enter the room. Ask the meeting chairman to introduce you to meeting attendees
you are not familiar with to help you record assigned tasks or decisions.
Do not record notes verbatim. Minutes are meant to give an outline of
what happened in the meeting, not a record of who said what. Focus on
understanding whats being discussed and on recording whats been assigned or
decided on.
Record action items and decisions in your template as they happen dont
wait until after the meeting to pull them out of your notes or you could make a
mistake. If you dont understand exactly what decision has been made or what
action has been assigned, ask the meeting lead to clarify.
3. After the Meeting. Review the notes and add additional comments, or
clarify what you didnt understand right after the meeting while the information
is fresh in everyones mind. Type your notes out in the template you created
before the meeting this will make the notes easier for everyone to read and use.
Number the pages as you go so you arent confused later. Remember,
though, that the minute-taker is responsible for providing good flow. Dont force
yourself to write the minutes in the actual chronological order of the discussion
- it may not work.
Focus on action items, not discussion. The purpose of minutes is to define
decisions made and to record what actions are to be taken, by whom and when.
Be objective. Write in the same tense throughout and avoid using peoples
names except for motions or seconds. This is a business document, not about
who said what.
Avoid inflammatory or personal observations. The fewer adjectives or
adverbs you use, the better. Dull writing is the key to appropriate minutes.
The exact wording of motions, whether passed or failed, and the way they
were disposed of, along with the name of the maker
If the vote was counted, the count should be recorded. Tellers reports, if
there are any, are included. In roll call votes the record of each persons
vote is included
Discussion: Minutes are a record of what was done at the meeting, not
what was said at the meeting
Committee Reports
Officers Reports
Written Motions
Tellers Reports
Correspondence
Minutes Proceedings
Approval . If the minutes have been distributed to the members before the
next meeting the presiding officer simply states Are there any corrections to the
minutes as printed? If there are none, or after all corrections have been made,
the presiding officer may say If there is no objection, the minutes will be
approved as printed (or as corrected).
Signature. After the minutes have been corrected and approved by the
members, they should be signed by the secretary and can be signed by the
president. The word approved and the date of the approval should also be
included.
Minutes Book. The official copy of the minutes should be entered in the
Minutes Book and kept by the secretary. These are the property of the
organization, not the secretary. If the organization has a headquarters office,
the official copy of the minutes should be kept there.
Copies . If the members receive a copy of the minutes, it is not necessary
for them to receive all the attachments. When they do not receive the
attachments, the minutes should include a brief summary of the attachments.
[Some small organizations choose to list attendees. This works well for boards
of directors.]
Members in attendance: [optional item]
Members not in attendance: [optional item]
Approval of minutes: Motion was made by [name], and seconded to approve
the minutes of the ______________ [date] meeting. Motion carried.
Officers' reports:
President
Vice president
Secretary
Treasurer
Board and committee reports:
Unfinished business:
[Subject title]
Motion: Moved by [name] that [state motion].
Motion carried. Motion failed. [leave only one of these]
New business:
[Subject title]
Motion: Moved by [name] that [state motion].
Motion carried. Motion failed. [leave only one of these]
Announcements:
Adjournment: The meeting was adjourned at ______________[time].
________________________________
Secretary
[Organization Name]
___________________
Date of approval
SELF-CHECK 2.2-4
1. The following statements describe the minutes of the meeting except
a. Minutes serve as official record of an organization
b. Minutes function as record of transaction