Dive
Into the World of Summarization!
Reading to Learn
Rationale: As students progress through school they become better readers and gain many useful strategies. The strategy we will be working on now will help children derive meaning and understanding from the texts they read. This strategy is called summarization and it helps students to comprehend the meaning within the text and organize it in an informative way. Teaching students to summarize will show them how to find out which information is the most important in any text. This lesson will teach students to extract important information from texts and summarize that information in their own words by reading an expository text and applying the rules of summarization they have learned.
Materials:
Poster with summarization rules
After reading, pick out all the important ideas
Reread all
of the important details you have chosen and delete all of the
information you do not need.
White Board
Markers
Pencils
Paper
Highlighters
Assessment Checklist for each child (see attached)
Procedures:
1. Say: "Hello everyone! Does everyone
remember what we worked on last week? Fluency! We read and reread
passages to become quick expressive readers. As we learn something new
today remember to read and reread so you will get the full effect of
the text. Has anyone ever heard of the word summarization? Excellent,
can you explain it to me? That is right; summarization is summing up
all of the important information from a text, article, or passage so we
can understand it and deleting everything else that is not needed."
"Can anyone tell me why summarizing could be important or if they have
done it before?" Those are all great answers! Let's all dive into the
world of summarization."
2. Say: "There are three
main steps for summarizing and I have them written here on the board.
First, after reading the story, pick out all of the important ideas.
Second, reread all of the important details you have chosen and delete
all of the information you do not need. Last, combine all of the
important ideas you have chosen to make a topic or summative
sentence(s)." "Can anyone tell me all three of the summarization
steps? Excellent, let's keep working!"
National Gegraphic:
http://kids.nationalgeographic.com/Stories/AnimalsNature/Polar-bears-threatened
Ashley Buckelew. Look Who's Summarizing!http://www.auburn.edu/academic/education/reading_genie/journeys/buckelewrl.html
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Did the
student: |
Yes |
No |
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Read the article? |
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Pick out the most important information from the article? |
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Delete unnecessary information? |
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Understand the information from the article? |
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Write a sentence(s) summarizing the most important parts of the article
read? |
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