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Learn the art of summarizing with this guide, which provides techniques for identifying main points, avoiding biases, and creating concise and objective summaries. Discover the uses of summaries in academic writing, critiques, analysis, research, and workplace documents. Get tips on reading effectively and structuring your summaries, including how to write a clear thesis statement. Improve your summarizing skills and enhance your understanding of any text.
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SummarizingMostly Borrowed fromA Sequence for Academic Writing byBehrens, Rosen and Beedles
Definition of “Summarize” • To make a brief statement, in your own words, of the content of a passage – paragraph, article, book – focusing on the central idea.
Length? Depends. • Some summaries are a couple of sentences and only articulate the central point. • Some summaries are longer and more complicated. • They articulate the central idea, • indicate the main points that support or explain that idea, • reflect the order in which those points are presented • and may include examples from the passage. • They do NOT • include minor details, • repeat points for emphasis, • discuss or call attention to personal opinion or conclusions. • The qualities of a good summary are brevity, completeness and objectivity.
Objectivity? • We all know, of course, that perfect objectivity is impossible. We’re all biased by our backgrounds, experiences, beliefs. • But, it is possible to screen your writing for your own biases and work to expunge them from your summaries.
Academic Writing Critiques Synthesis Analysis Research Literature Reviews Argument Essay Exams Workplace Writing Policy briefs Business plans Memos, letters and reports Medical Charts Legal Briefs Uses of the Summary
Reading to Summarize • Examine thecontext: • Note credentials, occupation, publications of author. (In our case, what do you know about Shakespeare?) • Identify source the piece appeared in. (Where would the piece have been performed? For whom?) • Find out about the period in which the piece was written. What’s going on around the author that might influence his or her thinking. • Think about the author’s reputation. How has he or she been received? What have others said about her or him?
Reading to Summarize • Note titles and subtitles: • What topic is being addressed? • What is the author’s attitude toward the topic? • How is the title metaphorical or symbolic? • What are the divisions of the topic? • If there are no subtitles, create some to help you think about what’s going on. • How would you subtitle the different acts of the play, for example? • How would you subtitle different paragraphs of an essay?
Reading to Summarize • Identify the main point: Read to determine the author’s main idea. • Identify the subordinate points: How does the author use smaller points to arrive at her or his “big” statement? • Distinguish between points, examples, and counterpoints: • When the writer quotes someone else, they are using an example. That is not something that you need to refer to in your summary, generally. • Sometimes, writers will refer to those who disagree with them in order to answer criticisms of their ideas. These counterarguments, also, are, in general, not necessary to your summary of the writer’s ideas.
Reading to Summarize • Watch for transitions within and between paragraphs: Look for “On the other hand,” or “In comparison,” or “In support of,” or “It is unlikely that,” • Read actively and recursively: • Read as if you were in dialogue with the writer. Ask questions, take notes, underline key ideas. • Read circularly rather than linearly. Stop to sum up, circle back to reread, keep checking to make you understand and can fit all the pieces together.
Writing Summaries • Read carefully: • Look for structure • Identify purpose in order to help you determine what’s critical and what’s minor in the argument • Take notes to keep involved, keep yourself clear and focused, note questions. • REREAD: • Divide the passage into sections or stages • Label passages with subtitles • Write one sentence summaries of each stage or section
Writing Summaries • Write a Thesis – A one or two sentence summary of the entire piece • Maybe try the who, what, when, where, why and how approach • Think about what the author was trying to persuade you to believe or do • Check to see if there is a thesis statement in the original piece that you can quote or paraphrase
Writing Summaries • The First Draft: • Combine the thesis with your list of one sentence summaries. • Or, combine the thesis with one sentence summaries plus significant details from the text • Check your summary against the original: • Have you contained your biases? Is it an objective report? • Have you forgotten any significant points? • Have you included minor details, examples, counterarguments that aren’t necessary? • Revise: • to insert transitional words and phrases • To combine sentences for a smooth, logical flow of ideas • To ensure grammatical correctness, punctuation and spelling
The Tempest and Summarizing • There are several thematic elements that could control your summary of the Tempest. • The political/postcolonial • Sleep/dream, reality/fantasy • Loyalty/conspiracy, ruler/ruled • Slavery/freedom • Order of the universe/Great Chain of Being • Tempest • Earth/air • Strange/Wondrous world • Music/noise • Earth/air • Real/magic
Paraphrasing • Recasting a passage into your own words • Usually used with short passages • Implies a thorough understanding of the passage to be paraphrased • Works by substituting your words for those of the source; get out your thesaurus; brush up on synonyms • No need to structure your text like the original. Work for smooth, comprehensive, cohesive style.
For example . . . The original • I have read and listened, and I think now that I can convincingly crystallize the thoughts chasing about in the minds of, first, those whose concern with AIDS victims is based primarily on a concern for them, and for the maintenance of the most rigid standards of civil liberties and personal privacy, and second, those whose anxiety to protect the public impels them to give subordinate attention to the civil amenities of those who suffer from AIDS and primary attention to the safety of those who do not. • William Buckley “Identify All Carriers”
The paraphrase • Buckley finds two opposing sides in the AIDS debate: those concerned primarily with the civil liberties and the privacy of AIDS victims, and those concerned primarily with the safety of the public. • Behrens, Rosen, Beedles A Sequence for Academic Writing
The Original • We have found out that the distortion in dreams which hinders our understanding of them is due to the activities of a censorship, directed against the unacceptable, unconscious wish-impulses. • Sigmund Freud, Tenth Lecture General Introduction to Psychoanalysis
The paraphrase • It is difficult to understand dreams because they contain distortions. Freud believed that these distortions arise from our internal censor, which attempts to suppress unconscious and forbidden desires. • Behrens, Rosen, and Beedles, A Sequence for Academic Writing
Quoting Poetry/Drama • ..\..\..\My Documents\112\Fall 00\lectures.doc – p. 19
Let’s try a paraphrase: • Look at and investigate the meaning of Prospero’s last speech. • Write a paraphrase of Prospero’s last speech, including a short quotation. • Write a paraphrase of Prospero’s last speech, but include a quotation of three lines or more. • Use ellipses when you leave words out. (. . .) • Use brackets when you add words. ([ ])
Practice Summarizing: • ½ = Postcolonialist Professor (p. 93-94) • ½ = Traditionalist Professor (p. 94-96) • Read and write a summary. • In small groups, compare your summaries. • Organization and Completeness • Selection of events focused on a theme or unifying idea • Tone • Control of bias • Proper level of detail • Produce one summary that combines the best aspects from all group members. • Share.