Guidelines for writing

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Writing.
Advertisements

Personal Essay.
Mr. White’s History Class
Writing with Sources Effective Integration of Research.
Writing to persuade or convince the reader.
English Skills, Chapter 18 by John Langan
Writing a Summary.
Technical Communication Fundamentals, 1 st Edition W.S. Pfeiffer and K. Adkins © 2011 Pearson Higher Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ All Rights.
The Odyssey Argumentative Essay Eng. 9A. Purpose of an Argumentative Essay The argumentative essay is a genre of writing that requires the student to.
Expository Writing.
“An Introduction to EAP – Academic Skills in English” Lesson 3
Mr Gordana Zalad WRITING A SUMMARY. What is a summary? A summary is a brief restatement – in your own words – of the contents of a passage.
Argumentative essays.  Usually range from as little as five paragraphs to as many as necessary  Focus is mainly on your side  But there is also a discussion.
Structuring an essay. Structuring an Essay: Steps 1. Understand the task 2.Plan and prepare 3.Write the first draft 4.Review the first draft – and if.
Writing an Modified Objective Summary Adapted by Mrs. Shoulders.
 A summary is a brief restatement of the essential thought of a longer composition. It reproduces the theme of the original with as few words as possible.
LOCATING THE STATED MAIN IDEA
Outline for a Five-Paragraph Essay. Paragraph 1: Introduction The introductory paragraph should include the following elements: Background information:
Dr. MaLinda Hill Advanced English C1-A Designing Essays, Research Papers, Business Reports and Reflective Statements.
Body Paragraphs Writing body paragraphs is always a T.R.E.A.T. T= Transition R= Reason/point from thesis/claim E= Evidence (quote from the text) A= Answer.
Signposting L 5 Ing. Jiří Šnajdar
1 Academic Skills Tips for Essay Writing. 2 Outline of today’s lecture Academic skills Essay writing Paraphrasing Summarizing.
Summary Writing A well-constructed summary highlights the author's important points and should be structured like any other piece of writing: It should.
TODAY WE ARE GOING TO LEARN... HOW TO WRITE AN EXPOSITORY ESSAY !!!!!!
THE ARGUMENTATIVE (SYNTHESIS) ESSAY A QUICK GUIDE.
IDENTIFYING SUPPORTING DETAILS
Advanced English Writing
May 2009 Of Mice and Men Essay.
A writer’s guide..  To really be successful at writing essays it is important to have a solid structure.  This enables you to do two things well 1.
{ The writing process Welcome. In the prewriting stage the follow must be considered:   factual information pertaining to topic   clear definition.
SUMMARY WRITING You should be able to: 1.take Cornell Notes on the presentation 2.summarize what you have read about in sentences.
1 Welcome to IST Department of Psychology
Chapter 6 Punctuation I teach the students to know punctuation is partly based on grammar. For example, commas are often used to separate clauses. If the.
APE Writing Strategy ASSERT PROVE EXPLAIN.
From Perspectives on Contemporary Issues: Readings Across the Disciplines - 5 th Edition.
Writing Lynne Kerfoot Centre for Study Skills and Access.
Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Synthesizing
Paraphrasing  In academic writing it is often necessary to refer to other people’s research  Direct quotations and paraphrasing  Paraphrasing means.
Paragraphs What is a paragraph?. ONE idea A paragraph introduces and develops one idea.
Writing a Critical Review
Paraphrase and Summarize SOW. Summarize A recounting of important details of a text. Shorter than the original. Includes key elements of the original.
Chapter 4 Main Ideas and Paragraph Structure
Diana Cason Bakersfield College
 An article review is written for an audience who is knowledgeable in the subject matter instead of a general audience  When writing an article review,
How to Write a Summary It’s Easy - Really!. ❖ A summary is a condensed version of a larger reading. ❖ A summary is not a rewrite of the original piece.
Building Your Paper Paragraphs and Quote Integration.
NOTE MAKING Who is the end-user? What is the purpose? (report, meeting, presentation)
Mass Media English I Dr. Ruba Asbahi. Copyright 2008 PresentationFx.com | Redistribution Prohibited | Image © 2008 clix/sxc.hu | This text section may.
Writing a summary. To write a summary, use your own words to express briefly the main idea and relevant details of the piece you have read. Your purpose.
ELA What is an essay? An essay is an extended piece of writing in which an author explores a subject in some detail. Skilled essayists do the following:
The Comparative Essay Pay Attention well... For this is the format you should follow for this Essay & possibly your Exam.
UNIT 4 From Pakistan to Vietnam. Future Tenses There are a number of different ways of referring to the future in English. It is important to remember.
SUMMARIES The short version. What is it? A summary is a brief restatement of the main ideas of a written text. They are written in your own words and.
 Do Now December 7 th. Objective SWBAT identify the central idea of a text IOT analyze its development over the course of a text.
Essay Organizer The Five Paragraph Essay
Paragraph #1-Introduction
Writing a Summary THE LOVE SONG OF J. ALFRED PRUFROCK BY T.S.ELIOT.
QEP WORKSHOP Quality Enhancement Plan at Brookhaven College To Make a Long Story Short… Writing an Effective Summary Sherri Morrison, QEP Reading Specialist.
Central Idea and Objective Summary. Central “Main” Idea and Detail Main Idea- the topic and controlling point of a paragraph; what the paragraph is about.
Aim: To test our skills on part 2 of the regents exam
Argument Essay Outline
Analyzing Argument.
Quality Enhancement Plan at Brookhaven College
Central Idea and Objective Summary
By Joseph Cheatle Adapted from the OWL at Purdue
Objective Summary How Do I Write One?.
ARGUMENTATIVE WRITING
Writing A critical Review
Writing a Summary.
Writing Opinion Paragraphs
Presentation transcript:

Guidelines for writing a SUMMARY

A summary A summary is condensed version of a larger reading.  A summary is not a rewrite of the original text and does not have to be long nor should it be long.  To write a summary, use your own words to express briefly the main idea and relevant details of the text you have read.  

A summary The purpose of a summary is to give the reader, in about 1/3 of the original length of a text, a clear, objective picture of it and to give the basic ideas of the original reading: what was it about and what did the author want to communicate?  Most importantly, the summary restates only the main points of a text. 

Skills practiced: Note-taking, paraphrasing (using your own words and sentence structure). While reading the original work, take notes of what or who is the focus. Ask the usual questions that reporters use: Who? What? When? Where? Why? How?  Using these questions to examine what you are reading can help you to write the summary.

Writing your summary Steps: Before writing the summary: Highlight the topic sentence Highlight key points/key words/phrases Highlight the concluding sentence Outline each paragraph in the margin Take notes on the main idea of the original, the major supporting points and explanations

Before writing the summary: Sometimes, the central idea of the text is stated in the introduction or first paragraph, and the supporting ideas of this central idea are presented one by one in the following paragraphs. Always read the introductory paragraph thoughtfully and look for a master statement.  Frequently, however, the central idea, is implied or suggested.  Pay attention to the title and any headings and to the opening and closing lines of paragraphs.

Writing your summary Steps: Writing the summary: Organize your notes into an outline which includes main ideas and supporting points. The main idea or argument needs to be included in this first sentence.  Then mention the major aspects/factors/reasons that are discussed in the text.  Discuss each supporting point in a separate sentence.  Give 1-2 explanations for each supporting point, summarizing the information from the original. 

Writing the summary: Support your topic sentence with the necessary reasons or arguments raised by the author. Write an introductory paragraph that begins with an outline including introducing the main idea. Use discourse markers that reflect the organization and controlling idea of the original: cause-effect, comparison-contrast, classification, process, chronological order, persuasive argument, etc.

Reporting verbs In paraphrasing , use some of the reporting verbs like: report, explain, discuss, illustrate, observe, recommend, argue against… argue, claim, contend, maintain, insist, state,

Sentence connectors Use sentence connectors like: accordingly, along with, as an example, as opposed to, consequently, either … or, evidently, for example, for the purpose of, generally speaking, however, in accordance with, in contrast, in such a way that, moreover, namely, not only but, once, that is why, thus, unlike

Remember: Do not rewrite the original piece. Keep your summary short. Use your own wording. Refer to the central and main ideas of the original piece. Read with who, what, when, where, why and how questions in mind. Do not put in your opinion of the issue or topic discussed in the original text.