Title: Writing a Pr
1Writing a Précis An Essential Part of Research
- Adapted from work by June Olson
- Mountain Pointe High School
- 2006-07
2What is a Précis?
- A précis is a formal summary of a non-fictional
work. Précis are used to present the ideas in
the original work as a thumbnail sketch. - However, the précis must be
- objective (That means no personal interpretation)
- complete (All major ideas, significant arguments,
support) - concise (one-quarter to one-fifth the size of the
original) - Précis are used in scholarly endeavors as
- part of the research process
- means to prevent plagiarism
3What is a Précis?
- The précis
- is a type of summarizing that insists on an exact
reproduction of the logic, organization, and
emphasis of the original texts. - details the relative order, proportions, and
relationships of the original parts of a text. - An effective précis
- retains the logic, development, and argument of
the original in much shorter form. - is useful when you are dealing with lengthy
passages that demand careful attention to the
logic and organization of an argument.
4Different Than a Paraphrase
- A paraphrase
- says in different and simpler words exactly what
the original passage has to say. - may be as long as the passage itself.
- A précis
- rarely is more than one-third the length of the
original selection and may be only one-fourth as
long. - gives only the heart of a passage. It omits
repetition and such details as examples,
illustrations, and adjectives unless they are of
unusual importance.
5How is a précis written?
- A précis is written
- entirely in the words of the person writing it,
not in the words of the original selection. - Tip Avoid the temptation to lift long phrases
and whole sentences from the original. Though
quotations are required, in this assignment, to
substantiate your summary. - from the point of view of the author whose work
is being summarized. - Do not begin with such expressions as This
author says or The paragraph means. - Begin as though you were summarizing.
6The Challenge to Writing a Précis
- Writing is only half of the challenge. The most
important task is to read and fully understand
the text. - Often, we understand information we can relate
to, or fit into previously-known frames of
reference, values, ideas. - However, sources often refute, expand, challenge
us to think more deeply about the subject. - A précis does not serve to argue against, to
point out errors or logical fallacies, or to
judge the authors ideas. - Therefore, it is the thinking before the writing
that determines a worthy précis.
7Benefits of a Précis
- This assignment is not easy! However, it does
bring benefits. - Upon completion of the précis, especially if done
well, you will never, ever forget the argument,
the examples, and the development of the article.
- You will also find that skills developed in
précis writing establish and hone foundational
skills required for both educational and
professional success. - analysis
- synthesis
- comparison
- other key higher-order thinking skills
8Goals of the Précis
- To compress, distill, and clarify a lengthy
passage, article, or book, while retaining
important concepts, key words, and important data - To remove superfluous information yet retain the
core essence of the work - To define, in brief, any key terms
- To give a brief description of methods and
approaches used by the researchers - To state the importance of the research or piece
of writing - Why was it important to conduct this research or
write on this topic?
9Active Reading
- Underline, highlight, or circle key sentences,
phrases, and words. - Read each paragraph as a unit of thought.
- Use a dictionary for words that seem important or
those that you do not understand. - As you discover them, summarize main points in a
few words. - Decide if the content is based on opinion,
evidence, and/or logic and why that can be
important.
Note The italicized skills are not used when
preparing to write a précis.
10Active Reading
- Think about the subject-audience-context-purpose
relationship. - Look for evidence, logical analysis, reasoning.
- Think about your biases for and against the ideas
presented. - Evaluate your reactions to the material.
- Annotate Make notes in the margins.
Note In précis writing, you will have to
disregard these reactions.
11Active Reading
- Record reactions, questions, and understandings
of the reading. - Organize text for reviewing, studying, or writing
by adding numbers to marginal notes. - Isolate key terms and phrases. Write them in the
margins. - Write notes on key words, phrases, or sentences.
These writings can comment, question, evaluate,
define, relate, challenge.
Note The italicized skills are not used when
preparing to write a précis.
12The Basic Process
- Use Active Reading skills as you comb the
article many times to ferret out its gist and
significant details. - Highlight the work as you read.
- Locate the thesis statement and its
sub-arguments. - For each point, find the specific, supporting
evidence used by the author. - Write key words and numbers in the margin to
outline the work.
13The Basic Process
- Read the work again, adding and discarding
marginal notes. - One of the first (if not the first) difficulties
to overcome in writing a précis is getting the
facts straight. - You should not list any statements unsupported by
the text. - Make sure to extract only factually correct
information. -
14The Basic Process
- Another difficulty is putting the material into
your own words. - After reading the text three times, put the work
aside then begin writing. This will force you to
use your own words without the temptation of
borrowing directly from the original. - Check the piece for accuracy.
-
15The Basic Process
- Writing in your own words, begin the précis with
a statement that encompasses the entire argument.
Remember that the précis takes the point-of-view
of the original writer. If the original is
written in the first person, reflect this in the
précis. - Not In the Declaration of Independence,
Jefferson maintains - But An essential connection binds between how we
are governed and
16The Basic Process
- Present the logical progression (the development)
of the argument with its component parts in your
own words. - Use your marginal numbers and key words as
guides. -
- Simplify.
- Use words to replace phrases, and use phrases to
replace clauses. - Discard unimportant ideas and illustrations.
- Use simple figures of speech.
17The Basic Process
- Reduce the article to one-fifth to one-third of
its original length, omitting nothing from the
essential argument. - Although you should be as brief as possible,
guard against being so condensed that you obscure
the point of passage. - Nothing should be said more than once.
- Check your draft for expression errors,
repetition or vague phrasing then write a
smoother final version. - This is, in reality, this is the key to the whole
enterprise!
18Now for a giant leap
- Lets go through some examples
and be more specific
19Sentence 1
- Your first sentence in the précis should have
- the name of author,
- the genre title of the work,
- date in parentheses,
- an active verb (such as "assert" "argue"
"suggest" "imply" "claim) and - a THAT clause which contains the thesis statement
of the work. - This sentence is the who the what of the
original work.
20Example for Sentence 1
- Phillipa Gregorys novel, The Other Boleyn Girl
(2001), implies that ambition possesses the power
to corrupt and dispense true gratification,
filling the heart solely with desire infused with
greed and the ravenous hunger to reign.
- Notice the who and what is clearly defined in the
first précis sentence.
21Sentence 2 should contain
- an explanation of how the author develops and/or
supports the thesis, - This is usually done in chronological order.
22Example of Sentence 2
- Gregory develops this assertion through vivid
description of life in the Tudor court and
examination of cut-throat antics of a ruthless
family-members of whom will execute to attain
absolute power.
23Sentence 3 should be
- A statement of the authors apparent purpose,
followed by an "in order" phrase.
24Example for Sentence 3
- Gregorys purpose of elaborating on ambition is
to depict the outlandish lengths one will embark
in order to fill a selfish void within ones
greedy and desperate soul.
25Sentence 4
- Sentence 4 A description of the intended
audience and/or the relationship the author
establishes with the audience.
26Example for Sentence 4
- Gregory engages the average woman through the
themes of scandal, conniving competition, and
passionate lust, all of which evokes every
womans desire to be a queen.
27Now you are ready to start paraphrasing
- Study each paragraph, read it to understand the
main points then summarize the main points in
your own words
28Remember the following
- A précis retells the highlights so a reader will
know main sections of the original
- Writing a Précis
- Précis is a clear, concise, orderly summary of
the contents of a piece of writing.
29- A précis has only the essential details they
must be correct accurate
30Hurraynow that we know how to write a précis, we
are going to rush home and get them done.
Wait for us, Spot.
31The Basic Process
- Type the précis, beginning with your abstraction
of the central, informing idea of the article.
Having understood and written the central idea,
present the essential argument in as cogent
manner as possible. - Clue Once you have assimilated the article
through the illustrations and examples the writer
uses to make his/her abstract ideas concrete, you
do not have to include these illustrations and
examples in your précis! -
32Warning!
- Do not copy even one single sentence from the
article! - You may use the authors key words and phrases
(quoted) only to present technical terms central
to the authors arguments or support - So, paraphrase, paraphrase, paraphrase unless
there is really, truly, no better way to express
a concept than by using the authors words. - You must be certain that no other statement can
possibly be as pithy or as precise so as to
present this idea.
33A Finished Précis
- When finished, the précis should clearly state
the - Position studied/argued/discussed
- Focus or methods used to prove position
- Ideas as understood at a deep level
- Significance/Importance of this concept or set of
concepts
34Revising the Précis
- Check the draft for expression errors,
repetition or vague phrasing then write a
smoother final version. - Are the opening sentences brief and to the point?
Which is best? - Which opening sentence tends to show best what
the passage expresses? - Does the sentence following the opening sentence
amplify the essentials shown in the opening
sentence? - Which précis clarifies the authors best
thoughts? Have additional thoughts been added? - Is the précis clear to one who has not seen the
original source?
35Revising the Précis
- Did you retain the logical order and development
of these thoughts? - Did you emphasize the dominant thought or
erroneously emphasize a minor thought? - Did you omit any necessary facts? names? dates?
places? - Is your précis clear to one who has not seen the
original? - Are your sentences clear and well-constructed?
- Did you use third person and the past tense?
- Did you punctuate and spell correctly?
- Did you make any grammatical or rhetorical errors?
36Revising the Précis
- Read your first copy through carefully.
- Condense wherever you can, substituting single
words for phrases and phrases for longer clauses. - Use only simple figures of speech.
- Clearly and concisely express the essential
points. - Reduce verbiage while still making the point and
retaining some of the flavor and spirit of the
original. - Be fair to the sentiments expressed, even if you
don't agree with them. - Rewrite neatly.