No notation here, because CAGED is a way of navigating the fretboard and constructing new chord shapes.
Think about where the root notes are when playing chords in these exercises.
Play the open CAGED chords, and construct the alternate forms up and down the fretboard.
ie. start with an open C, then pivot to an A-shape C, then to a G-shaped C, then an E-shaped C, then a D-shaped C, and back down again.
Now start with an open A, then pivot to a G-shape A, then to an E-shaped A, then to a D-shaped A, then to a C-shaped A, and back down again.
Etc.
Do the same for F and B. (Remember that the standard F is an E-shape, and the standard B is an A-shape.)
Do the same for the minor versions of the chords. If you think about where the shape changes, you're learning where the third is in those chords. (A minor chord has a flattened third - it moves down a semitone.) An open C minor is an awkward and uncommon shape, but give it a shot.
Play these chord shapes on just the first 4 strings.
Play some standard chord progressions, using CAGED to keep the chords around the same neck position. Try these progressions at different positions - open, 5th fret, 9th fret, 12th fret, etc. (I-IV-V, vi-I-V, ii-VI-I)