Summary writing forms an integral part of the English paper 2
examination.
It contributes a hefty 20% towards your final English Language
grade which is pretty substantial.
That makes it as important as the Guided English composition found
in Section B of Paper 1 of the English Language Examination.
The Paper 2 examination is all about comprehension (understanding)
and the summary question reflects that.
If you work on your summary writing skills it is possible to get
20 marks.
Required
skills and materials
You will need to be fairly proficient with you English Language
skills including reading and writing.
Especially important are the following skills and topics:
discourse markers, conjunctions, spelling and punctuation.
You will need to bring a ruler and a pencil into the examination.
The steps
1. Read and understand the summary question a couple of times so as to make sure you are not
missing anything important.
2. Pay attention to the
instructions in the question (The English Language Examination is all about
instructions).
3. Pay close attention to
the summary boundary i.e. the portion of the passage from which you are
supposed to draw the material you will use to write your summary. For example a
question might ask you to include only material from paragraph 9 to the end of
paragraph 13. Take care to only include material from within the summary
boundary. Including additional material even if it fits the criteria (see
below) will not help you much as it will not be credited.
4. Determine the criteria
that you are going to use to determine the material you are going to use. For
example if you are asked to summarise the writer’s thoughts and actions after a
certain event make sure you only include the material from after the event.
5. Using your ruler and
pencil underline the phrases that meet the criteria in the passage.
6. In most questions you should be able to come up with about 15-25 phrases (points) that meet
the criteria.
7. Once you are done underlining the phrases extract these phrases and list them in the order in which they
appear in the passage.
8. Link the phrases using
discourse markers, punctuation and conjunctions. You might have to rewrite
some of the tenses so that they fit into the summary. Punctuation marks such as
the comma might be very useful when combining words and ideas that are related. Make sure you retain the same meaning exactly as the narrator or author. For example: He woke up, turned his head, screamed and then started crying as
he realised help was not coming.
This is more economical than say: The narrator woke up after. He turned
his head gingerly and felt a pain in his neck. He screamed for help and started
crying hysterically as he realised help was not coming.
9. Write your summary. you should write your summary in continous prose Take care to incorporate the words,
if any, that you were asked to start
with. For example a question might ask you to begin your summary with the
words: When the narrator fell off his horse and landed in a ravine ….
10. It is always advisable to take a peek at the words you are
supposed to begin your summary with as your style, tone and tense should match
that of these words.
11. Revise your summary
and correct the mistakes you would
have inevitably made when writing your first draft.
12. Write an estimate of
the number of words you might have used in square brackets [] after the end
of your summary. To make an estimate count the number of words in the first
line and multiply by the number of lines in your summary. As a general rule of
thumb (with most English Language summary questions requiring you to write a
summary of 150-160 words in length) a summary length of 140 words and below
means you have omitted important details and a summary length of 170 means you
have included irrelevant material. In inequality terms your summary should be
145 ≥x ≤ 165 where x is the length of your summary in words.
NB Most points/phrases can be used verbatim as they are in the
passage but some might need a little tweaking and rewriting.
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