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Writing Summaries
Writing good summaries requires accurate reading and the ability to find the main
idea and most important supporting evidence in a piece of writing. Summaries are always
quite a bit shorter than the original text, perhaps 75 percent shorter. When you write a
summary, you give your readers an idea of the content of an article or book and save them the
time and trouble of reading the entire original.
To write a goo summary, keep the following in mind:
1. Read the original carefully.
2. Mention the source and the author at the beginning of the summary.
3. State the author’s main idea without distorting those ideas or adding your
own.
4. State the author’s most important supporting evidence or sub points without
distorting them. Do not include details.
5. Use your own wording. Occasionally, however, a phrase in the original may be
especially striking, interesting or controversial. In that case, you may use the
author’s exact words if you put quotation marks around them.
6. Don’t include your own ideas or comments. The summary should include only
the author’s ideas.
7. Periodically remind the reader that you are summarizing someone idea.
Steps to follow:
- Underline the key words in the topic
- Underline the relevant parts of the texts.
- Write the points down in note form. You should organize the information in logical
fashion.
- See which points can be combined in a complex sentence.
- Write your summary.
If you want to start with an introductory sentence, make it brief.
Use linking words/ phrases and paraphrase where possible. Include only information
which is relevant to the topic
- Make sure your summary is within the set word limit.
- Edit your summary, checking spelling, punctuation, etc.
Remember that the summary should be in the present tense. Begin by mentioning the original
source. Here are possible ways to include the source.
The article “Biology as a Science” by Keith Ablow examines the nature of biology as …