Summary: "Exposition Writing"
First, remember what a summary is.
A summary repeats the main message of a reading in a shorter
way.
- Summaries should be in your own words, but ...
- A summary is not a paraphrase: do not use synonyms unless they make
your sentence shorter.
- Do NOT change the meaning! Do NOT add meaning!
- Leave out less important ideas only
- You may change the order of ideas - no need to put the 1st idea in
the reading 1st, the 2d idea 2d, etc. Short, clear writing is
the best.
Stage 1: Understand the Reading
Exposition writing does not focus on actions. It explains
the actions; it describes; it gives history. Exposition writing
is already a kind of summary; the writer has made the original information
shorter. It's your job to make it MORE SHORT.
When we summarize exposition writing, we focus on
the question: "What facts are important?"
Here are 3 steps to help you start. They should remind you of our
steps for paraphrasing!
- Verbs. What are the important verbs - the main verbs of each
paragraph? The verbs "be" and "seem" may be
important in exposition writing.
- Nouns. Focus on the subject of each sentence (who did
the action?) and the object (what thing or person was affected?)
- Dates, times, places. This is always important information.
You may want to highlight or circle these important words. This will
help your understanding.
Stage 2: Creating a Summary
Long Articles: First write an outline.
- Do any paragraphs repeat each other? Often, the Introduction
and Conclusion repeat a lot of information. No need to put the
same information twice.
- Usually, write a summary giving the information in chronological
order. You don't need to follow the order of the article.
- Choose the most important paragraphs -
- choose the most important actions in those paragraphs -
- Write a summary in your own sentences, using the same vocabulary as
the article.
Short Articles: No need to write an outline.
- Look at the circled verbs, nouns, dates and places.
- Choose the most important of the circled words.
- Write a summary in your own sentences, using the same vocabulary as
the article.
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