WRITING LESSON: Writing a Summary LEARNING OBJECTIVE Students will be able to determine the central ideas of a text, including how they emerge and are shaped and refined by specific details; they will be provide an objective summary of the text. Welcome... Thank you for supporting my store; I SO appreciate it. I really hope that these resources prove useful to your students, & that you enjoy using them. Please don’t hesitate to contact me if you have any questions or queries, and know that feedback is always welcomed. CONTENTS STEP-BY-STEP LESSON PLAN (Possibly 2 lessons) This step-by-step plan will guide you through the lesson(s) there is plenty of work here for two possible lessons. TAKING NOTES The first exercise in this lesson has students watching a TED talk. This handout will help them structure their notes while watching. PLANNING A SUMMARY This page can be used whenever students have to write a summary - it helps organize their thoughts and contains a useful checklist for post-writing. HOW TO WRITE A SUMMARY This informational handout details the process students should follow when attempting to write a summary, along with useful tips and tricks. (C) STACEY LLOYD 2019 STACEY LLOYD A bit about me... Learning should be engaging, interactive, and relevant. That is the core educational philosophy at the heart of every resource I create. Stacey You see, I come alive in a secondary English classroom, delivering innovative lessons which tap into students’ curiosity, inspire them to think critically, and require them to work collaboratively in the co-creation of knowledge. And I want to share that passion with other teachers. Which is why, when I am not physically in the classroom, I am usually working on developing resources which help other passionate educators deliver their own engaging, meaningful curriculum. So when you use my materials, you use resources created with 21st Century teenagers in mind: visually appealing, rigorous, and designed to prompt critical thought and analysis. If you have any questions, or even just want to connect with a fellow educator, please don’t hesitate to reach out to me at staceylloydteaching@gmail.com or let’s connect through one of the following: Follow on Instagram Connect on Facebook INNOVATIVE Shop my Store ENGAGING You might also like... click to view more Visit my Website RIGOROUS Are you looking to plan an engaging, diverse short story unit? This bundle contains resources and materials to help you make it a rigorous, thorough unit of study! These colorful posters will brighten up your classroom and help remind your students of these different figurative techniques. These posters were designed with teenagers in mind. These 22 worksheets are designed to help students improve their understanding of the importance of word choice, to help improve their writing and skills of close analysis. Do you have students who struggle to participate in group discussions? Others who over-share opinions but rarely ask questions to others? These cards can help! STACEY LLOYD ENGAGING TEACHING RESOURCES (C) STACEY LLOYD 2019 Lesson Plan Summary writing is a vital skill, which any English Language Arts student should acquire; it will help them learn to analyze what they read, write concisely and paraphrase. • Video Equipment • Internet • Worksheets CLASSROOM LAYOUT Print & copy the following worksheets (one per student): »»Note Taking While Watching a TED talk »»Planning a Summary »»How to write a Summary EQUIPMENT REQUIRED PRE-LESSON PLANNING LEARNING TO WRITE A SUMMARY Step-By-Step Plan INSTRUCT students to get into small groups of 4. HAND OUT the Note Taking While Watching a TED talk worksheet, and explain to students that they are going to have to write a summary of the arguments made by the speaker, so they must make detailed notes while watching. PLAY a TED talk to the class. Here are some suggestions, although you could select ANY TALK that is relevant to your students: Body Language Shapes Who You Are: https://www.ted.com/talks/amy_cuddy_your_body_language_shapes_who_you_are?language=en The Hidden Power of Smiling: https://www.ted.com/talks/ron_gutman_the_hidden_power_of_smiling How To Start A Movement: https://www.ted.com/talks/derek_sivers_how_to_start_a_movement?language=en Desks arranged in small groups of 4 Although students will normally have to summarize from a piece of written text, starting with a video will help them learn the skills without the temptation of being able to ‘lift’ large chunks of text word-for-word. (Make sure students are taking notes throughout.) INSTRUCT students to now discuss the talk in their small groups. They should compare notes, filling in what they missed and others noted. HAND OUT the Planning A Summary page to students, and instruct them (as a group, in pairs or individually) to complete this page. They need to decide on the main points of the talk, with any key details which should be included in a summary. Remind them that they can’t include everything, but they should have an overview of the whole talk. INSTRUCT students to now write their summaries, putting their points into a cohesive, fluent paragraph (or three) of writing. It should be no longer than a page - ideally only 3/4 of a page. HAND OUT the How to Write A Summary page to students (for their files/books) and read through it and discuss as a class. You want to make sure that students understand this page. If there is still time, or for homework (this also would make a great second lesson)... INSTRUCT students to find a newspaper/magazine article which interests them. They should then write a summary of the article, following all of the notes given on the Summary Handout. Spend a whole second lesson working on these in class, so that students shift their understanding from the video format to summarizing written text - and so you can walk around and assist struggling students. © STACEY LLOYD 2019 TAKING NOTES while watching a TED talk Speaker's Name: Points made (bullet points): Topic/Title: Key facts, figures, evidence or statistics © STACEY LLOYD 2019 KEY WORDS Direct Quotations (key lines) PLANNING PAGE WRITING A SUMMARY title of Piece being summarized: Genre/format: Author: Author's Purpose: Topic: Sections / sub-headings / key words / topics of each paragraph Key points (in your own words / use bullet points) Post writing Checklist Thesis statement (One sentence summary of the overarching topic/essence of the piece being summarized) I have done the following: Checked and edited my spelling and grammar. Written in my own words. Written in complete, fluent sentences. Enclosed any direct quotes in quotation marks. Made sure my summary is as concise as possible. Included all of the key points I identified. Used the present tense. Used transitional words (e.g. “however”). © STACEY LLOYD 2019 How To Write A Summary A summary is a brief statement or account of the main points of another author, or a piece of work. Learning to write a successful summary can be an invaluable skill for studying purposes, as the process of writing a summary will help you consolidate your own understanding of the things you read and learn. Where do I start?! 3 4 5 6 7 Read the whole piece through once: from start to finish, without pausing. This will give you a good overview of the piece - the main topic, key points, angle of the author etc. Re-read the piece, this time with a pen or highlighter in your hand. Underline or highlight all of the most important points or phrases. Try to look for sub-headings, or sentences which introduce new concepts - ignore the smaller details. Write out the underlined/ highlighted parts, in your own words (this is called paraphrasing). Try to use all your own words in a summary. However, if you do quote directly, make sure to enclose those words or phrases in quotation marks. Write out a thesis statement - one sentence which summarizes the essence of the piece: the main, overarching topic. This sentence should tell the reader what the whole piece is about. Spend some time writing this, as it is essential. Compile your thesis statement, and the list of main points into one fluent paragraph. Think about writing fluent sentences and linking them together with discourse markers (words such as ‘however’, ‘similarly’, ‘contrasting’, etc.) Go back to the original piece with your underlined/highlighted parts and make sure that you covered them all in your draft paragraph. Edit your summary (grammar and spelling, as well as fluency and content) and then rewrite your final version. Make sure that you left nothing out! Also, ask yourself if any of the details you included are unnecessary - now is the time to edit them out. Do not skip this step! The editing process is vital! Perhaps even ask a friend to peer edit, and ask them if it reads fluently. Keep it neutral! Don't give your personal opinion! A summary should be concise! at most, a quartere of the length of th original. Use all your own words - do not plagiarize! Write in the present tense ("the author says...") Show that it's not your own thoughts by referencing: "the article shows..." / "the author states..." Clearly r identify the auuthaore and work yoing in summariz ing your open sentence. © STACEY LLOYD 2019 1 2 TIPS & Tricks