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Published byEunice Day Modified over 8 years ago
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SUMMARY GENRE MODULE FIRST YEAR SERIES WRITING CENTER UNIVERSITY OF NORTH FLORIDA
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WORKSHOP OVERVIEW Define summary Review academic summary What vs. how and why
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DEFINE SUMMARY General: Per the OED: “Containing or comprising the chief points or the sum and substance of a matter” Academic: Depends on the discipline: Lab report abstract, book review, executive summary, etc.
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SUMMARY AS ORGANIZED “WHATS” Summary identifies the whats: Who’s written the text? What action is/are the author(s) taking? What kind of text is it? What are the major points/parts of the text? What are the key terms/examples? CComprehensive AAccurate BBrief IIndependent NNeutral The “Whats” Considerations
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WORKSHOP SUMMARY Define summary Review academic summary What vs. how and why
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GUIDED PRACTICE Let’s practice summarizing a text. View Réné Magritte’s “The Human Condition” (1933) and summarize it one sentence and list its parts (inventory of “whats”): http://www.renemagritte.org/images/paintings/the-human-condition.jpg
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ARTIFACT-BASED PRACTICE Now, let’s look at a writing assignment you have for one of your courses. Choosing one of the two texts you’ve read for your ENC 1101 or ENC 1143 class so far, write a one-sentence summary of that text.
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COMMON OVERSIGHTS Is not in MLA format (e.g., double spaced, 12-pt font, indented paragraph) Exceeds one paragraph or is briefer than 6 sentences (or longer than 260 words) Has short-sighted topic sentence or starts with too-specific information Don’t review the summary rubrics: Summary Mastery & Evidence, especially Relies on past-tense verbs or 1 st - and 2 nd -person pronouns (e.g., I, you, we) Quote too much: complete sentences or more Fails to name the text or authorial information fully Includes personal opinion/connections/analysis
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