Title: Summarizing An Essential Strategy
1Summarizing An Essential Strategy
Jen Madison ESU 6, Professional
Development jmadison_at_esu6.org See
http//manila.esu6.org/jmadison for other
resources!
2Objectives
- Explain basic research and theory of using
summarization as an instructional tool (when and
why). - Identify and use several methods of summarizing
to increase student learning (how).
3Agree or Disagree Anticipation Guide
- Decide whether you agree or disagree with each
statement.
4Why To Summarize
- Research-based
- Enduring skill
- Brain compatible
- Requires deep analysis
5When To Summarize
- Consider the Primacy-Recency Effect
- Sousa, D. (2001). How the Brain Learns
6When To Summarize
- Consider the Primacy-Recency Effect
- Before, during, after new information
- Difficult text (narrative expository)
- Lecture
- Discussion
- Modeling
- Film
- Activity or Practice
When should we ask students to summarize? Only
when we want them to remember something --Jane
E. Pollock
7Keep in Mind
- Effective Strategies
- Consistently applied
- Accurately applied
- Cannot assume students know how
- Teach techniques explicitly
- Model strategies
- Think-aloud
- Use tracking features in Word
- Encourage meta-cognition, learner reflection
8Agree or Disagree Anticipation Guide
- With a partner, review the statements on your
anticipation guide. - Have your responses changed? Explain the
rationale for your decision.
9Statements of Learning
- In one sentence and in your own words, explain
what you learned about ___ as a result of our
lesson. - Specify that students must include what they
learned about the specific concept - Not I learned how to summarize.
- Instead (I learned that) to summarize I should
keep important information, get rid of
unimportant stuff, and replace specific lists
with general words. - Monitor and provide feedback!
- Use quick desk checks, listen to groups
- Address misconceptions
- Model, provide examples
- Use as exit ticket
10Objectives
- Explain basic research and theory of using
summarization as an instructional tool (when and
why). - Identify and use several methods of summarizing
to increase student learning (how).
11Think - Pair - Share
- Think
- Identify one summary strategy weve already used.
- Pair Share
- Briefly share with a partner at your table.
- Paraphrase
- Listen restate the main idea ask for
clarification
12Classroom Practices
- Explicitly teach summarizing (your
expectations!) - Communicated in learners words, style
- Contains essential elements
- Opinion-free
- Provide models
- Teach students to evaluate their own summaries
- Use brain friendly lessons
- Create or activate personal background
- Prime the brain
- Use varied summary formats
- written, artistic, oral, physical, musical
- Provide separate opportunities for synthesis So
What?
13Classroom Practices (especially for text)
- Chunk text and experiences
- Implement the use of reading notations
- Allow students to mark consumable and
non-consumable text - Teach students to recognize familiar text
structures, read your text - Provide a purpose for reading the text
- Encourage two or more readings or exposures
14Five Cs of Summarizing McEwan, 2004, p.58
- Comprehend
- Read understand
- Chunk
- Divide into parts
- Compact
- Make each chunk smaller
- Conceptualize
- Think of key word for each chunk
- Connect
- Combine key words into a summary sentence
15Rule-based strategy Marzano, 2001, p. 32-35
- Delete material unnecessary to understanding
- specific statistics, examples, anecdotes
- Delete redundant (repetitive) material
- Substitute superordinate (general) terms for
lists - ex. flowers for roses, daisies, tulips, and
lilies - Select or compose a suitable topic sentence
16DKS
- Summarization requires that we
- Delete non-essential elements
- Keep essential elements
- Substitute some elements
- (Wormeli, R.)
17Summary Frames Marzano, 2001, p. 35-42
- Frameworks of questions (provided in advance by
the teacher) to highlight critical elements - Different for various types of information and
purposes - Narrative
- Topic-Restriction-Illustration
- Definition
- Argumentation
- Problem-Solution
- Conversation
18Reciprocal Teaching Marzano, 2001, p. 42-43
- a student-led cooperative strategy that requires
students to summarize information and engage in
further analysis - Four Steps
- Summarizing
- Questioning
- Clarifying
- Predicting
19Key Word Strategy
- Read the text (or listen, view, etc.)
- Record up to ten of the most important words
- Modify/clarify list
- Question the author
- What is the author trying to tell me about these
words or concepts? - Encourage rereading or multiple exposures between
steps whenever possible!
20Topic Sentences
- What is it about?
- What was the author trying to tell you about it?
- TS subject authors claim about subject
- Subject Dogs
- Claim make great pets if well-trained
- TS Well-trained dogs make great pets.
21Write A Headline
- Consider a chunk of information.
- Write a short headline to summarize the
information.
Death, Insanity Dominate Shakespearean Tragedy
22Write News Article Beginning
- Most information in first two paragraphs
- Who?
- What?
- When?
- Where?
- Why?
- How?
23R.A.F.T
- Role
- Audience
- Format
- Topic
- Differentiate
- Raise Complexity choose items farther from
natural fit - Moderate/Lower Complexity choose items closer
to natural fit - (Wormelli, R.)
24One-Word Summary
- Identify one word that sums up a particular
concept or lesson - Explain your choice
- in writing
- to a partner
- in a picture
- Most Important Step!
- isolation of critical
- attributes
- relevance, validity
25Sentence Strings
- Teacher provided frames to help students pick out
important information
- Something
- happened
- (and)
- then
The purpose of (source) is to _(inform,
persuade, etc.) (audience) about (topic)
by (methodsexamples, description, facts, etc.)
26Use Nonlinguistic Representation
- Graphic Organizers
- Tableau (or other kinesthetic representation)
- Pictures, Images, Graphics
- Music
27Learner Summary Mosaic
- Draw a window with 5 panes.
- Write a single word or short phrase in each pane
representing the most important ideas - Connect these ideas/concepts in (1-3) sentences.
28Lotus Notes
29Summarization Pyramid
- Provide structure and prompts to help students
choose important information - Potential prompts for lines
- synonym, analogy, question, attributes,
alternative title, causes, effects, reasons,
arguments, ingredients, opinion, larger category,
formula/sequence, insight, tools
30Summary Cubes
- Record one important idea or concept per side.
- Emphasize Blooms Taxonomy levels (one per side)
- Use as a manipulative review stimulus
- Try the biocube at www.readwritethink.com
31Venn Diagram
Conclusion
So What?
32T-Chart
Informal outline or notes
Some visual depiction
Summary statements about the information,
reflections and comments on learning
33T-Chart
- Main Ideas
- Reasons President Wilson designed the plan for
peace -
-
- Three Immediate Effects on U.S. Allies
- Three Protocols created by the Plans
- Summary
- Details/Examples
- 1.
- 2.
- 3.
- 1.
- 2.
- 3.
- 1.
- 2.
- 3.
34Four Window Pane
35Four Window Pane Fractions
36Frayer Model
37Frayer Model
2 is the only even prime 0 and 1 are not
prime Every whole number can be written as a
product of primes
Definition A whole number with exactly two
divisors (factors)
Prime
Examples 2,3,5,7,11,13
Non-Examples 1,4,6,8,9,10
38Geometric Processing
- Name something that squared with what you
already thought or already do in your classroom. - Name something that made you view something from
a new angle. - Name an action or strategy that you will take as
a result of todays training.
39Head, Heart, Foot Closing
- Something you thought differently about regarding
similarities and differences - Something you felt today
- Something you will do, based upon the information
shared
40Objectives
- Explain basic research and theory of using
summarization as an instructional tool (when and
why). - Identify and use several methods of summarizing
to increase student learning (how).
41Two Stars a Wish
- Please record two of the most important or
relevant ideas you heard. - Please record something you wish about this
session
I was put on earth by God in order to accomplish
a certain number of things right now I am so far
behind I will never die! --Calvin and Hobbes
42(No Transcript)
43References
- McEwan, E.K. (2004). 7 Strategies of Highly
Effective Readers - Sousa, D. (2006). How the Brain Learns. (Third
Edition). - Wolfe, P. (2001). Brain Matters Translating
Research into Classroom Practice - Wormeli, R. (2005). Summarization in Any
Subject.
44Resources
- Lenny Vermaas Website
- http//manila.esu6.org/lvermaas
- ESU Instructional Strategies Website
- http//manila.esu6.org/instructionalstrategies/
- Cube Model Template
- http//www.mathsisfun.com/geometry/cube-model.html
- Read-Write-Think Summarizing with the Bio-Cube
- http//www.readwritethink.org/lessons/lesson_view.
asp?id1028
45Meta-analysis Results Marzano, Pickering,
Pollock, 2001
46Brain Power!
- If you cant paraphrase information, you havent
learned it! (Hunter) - Personalized, meaningful information (notes in
students own words) will be retained better,
longer. - Attaching meaning to teaching is one key element
of the information processing model. - Providing organizing structures helps the brain
see patterns, relationships, and connections.
Information summarized by Heflebower, ESU 6
47Sousa, D. (2001). How the Brain Learns
48Cognitive Science Principles
- Nothing goes into long-term memory unless it is
connected to something already in storage. Create
prior knowledge where there is none. - Our ability to retrieve information has more to
do with how it first enters our minds, not how we
study it later. Structure information the first
time around - dont leave it to students.
49Brain Confabulation
- The brain seeks wholeness. It will fill holes in
partial learning with made-up learning and
experiments, and it will convince itself that
this was the original learning all along. To
prevent this -
- Deal With Misconceptions!
50Priming The Brain
- A Home Is For Sale
- The first person to look at it is a contractor.
After he goes through, ask him to summarize. - The second is a young couple having a new baby in
3 months. Ask them to summarize. - Will their summaries be the same?
- Tell learners the purpose, structure, and reasons
for summarizing. - Those without priming remember .32 or less.
- Those with priming remember .85 or more.
51Summarizing vs. Paraphrasing
Conclusion What are the most important
characteristics shared by the summary and
paraphrase?
So What? Based on our definition, what specific
skills must we teach student explicitly in order
for them to use summary and paraphrase most
effectively?