|
Writing Center Handouts
Writing Summaries
- The goal of writing a summary of an
article, a chapter, or a book is to offer as accurately as possible
the full sense of the original, but in a more condensed form. A summary
restates the author’s main point, purpose, intent, and supporting details
i n your own words.
- The process of summarizing enables you
to better grasp the original, and the result shows the reader that you
understand it as well. In addition, the knowledge gained allows you
to better analyze and critique the original.
- First, try to find the main idea in
the reading; it’s usually in the first paragraph. Next, skim through
the article, glancing at any headings and graphics. Then, read the conclusion.
The intent here is both to give yourself a review of the work and t
o effectively engage yourself with it.
- Now go back and read the original text
carefully, jotting down notes on or highlighting the important points.
Write the central idea and the author’s reasons (purpose and intent)
for holding this viewpoint. Note the supporting elements the author
uses to explain or back up her/his main information or claim.
- Make an outline that includes the main
idea and the supporting details. Arrange your information in a logical
order, for example, most to least important or chronological. Your order
need not be the same as that in the original, but keep related suppo
rting points together. The way you organize the outline may serve as
a model for how you divide and write the essay.
- Write the summary, making sure to state
the author’s name in the first sentence. Present the main idea, followed
by the supporting points. The remainder of your summary should focus
on how the author supports, defines, and/or illustrates that main ide
a. Remember, unless otherwise stated by your instructor, a summary should
contain only the author’s views, so try to be as objective as possible.
- As you revise and edit your summary,
compare it to the original and ask yourself questions such as: Have
I rephrased the author’s words without changing their meaning? Have
I restated the main idea and the supporting points accurately and in
my own words?
- If you are asked to write a critical
summary or to include a critique, you may want to ask yourself questions
such as: Does the author succeed? How and why or why not? What are the
strengths, weaknesses? Why? What did the author do well? Not well? Why?
Back to Index |