The introduction (usually one paragraph)

1. Contains a one-sentence thesis statement that sums up the main point of the source. This thesis statement is not your main point; it is the main point of your source. Usually, though, you have to write this statement rather than quote it from the source text. It is a one-sentence summary of the entire text that your essay summarizes.

2. Also introduces the text to be summarized:

· Gives the title of the source (following the citation guidelines of whatever style sheet you are using).

· Provides the name of the author of the source.

· Sometimes also provides pertinent background information about the author of the source or about the text to be summarized.

· The introduction should not offer your own opinions or evaluation of the text you are summarizing.

The main body of a summary (one or more paragraphs)

In your summary, be sure that you:

· Include importantdata but omit minor points.

· Include one or more of the author’s examples or illustrations (these will bring your summary to life).

· Do not include your own ideas, illustrations, metaphors, or interpretations. You are simply repeating what the source text says, in fewer words and in your own words. But the fact that you are using your own words does not mean that you are including your own ideas.

When you have summarized the source text, your summary essay is finished. Do not add your own concluding paragraph unless your teacher specifically tells you.


Понравилась статья? Добавь ее в закладку (CTRL+D) и не забудь поделиться с друзьями:  



double arrow
Сейчас читают про: