Two summary for two journals

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summary_presentation.pptx

Annotating & Summarizing

So that your reader can, like, understand what you are talking about

Structure of the Research Paper

Intro

Sets up and develops the major (overall) claim of the paper

Major claim: last few sentences of paragraph

Body Paragraphs

Topic sentences: sub-claims

Uses evidence to support the sub-claim

Conclusion

Articulates the implications (or stakes) of the research

Uses analysis to explain how the evidence supports the sub-claim

Connects paragraphs to show how the major claim develops

Connects the claim to a larger context

Can ask new questions or suggest ideas for further research

Body Paragraphs

Argument

Summarize relevant research

Analyze and interpret the research

Annotating Scholarly Articles

STEP 1: BEFORE YOU BEGIN

 

Establish your purpose

Imagine the writing situation 

Skim and scan – headings, visuals, footnotes, references

Pre-reading gives you a lot of information right off the bat!

STEP 2: GET A TASTE OF THE ARGUMENT

Read the abstract

Read the first and last sentence of paragraphs

Read the conclusion

What have you learned about this article thus far?

STEP 3: READ THE TEXT

Annotate

Read ACTIVELY

Use your pen!

Circle, underline, star

Look up words

Leave marginal comments

Have a conversation with the text!

Step 4: After reading

Annotation Matrix

Write a summary

Reflect: How will you write about this source strategically for the paper?

Don’t assume you’ll remember later: leave yourself a trail of clues!

Summary Definition

A summary is an objective, condensed, accurate description of an original work (an article, essay, report, etc)

Think of your audience! They know nothing and you know everything: teach them!

Use your own words

Main arguments, main supporting ideas, and main analyses

The summary is specific and precise

NO personal opinion

Be strategic: the summary precedes your analysis in the research paper

USE YOUR OWN WORDS

Copying and pasting the same words without citing them = plagiarism 

Using just a few of the same words without citing them = plagiarism 

Changing a few words and keeping the sentence structure in tact = plagiarism 

Changing every other word by replacing them with synonyms = plagiarism 

Step 1

Read slowly and carefully, annotating as you read.

main arguments

main pieces of evidence

main analyses

how the writer develops their argument

stakes/implications

keywords

Step 2

Outline the text in a short, bullet-point list.

USE YOUR OWN WORDS in the outline to prevent plagiarism

Outline in chronological order: write out the main ideas in each paragraph, going in the order they were written

Only write out the main, major, or central ideas, arguments, analyses, and pieces of evidence

Make decisions about what’s most important to get across to your reader

Step 3

Turn your outline into a narrative summary

Write a first draft from your outline, without looking back at the text: this will help you USE YOUR OWN WORDS

After writing the first draft, go back to the text and fact check: make sure you are accurately and precisely representing the author’s ideas, without your own opinion

First Sentence is Key

In gender pronoun genre of text Title of Text capitalized and in quotes or italicized (date), author’s full name active verb main idea/argument.

In her article “Birth, Belonging and Migrant Mothers: Narratives of Reproduction in Feminist Studies” (2009), Irene Gedalof argues that transnational and migration studies could benefit from feminist scholarship on motherhood and reproduction.

Activate Active Verbs

NO: “She says…”

YES: “She argues…”

WHY: Be specific about what KIND of statement you are describing.

NO: “She goes on to say…”

YES: “She demonstrates how…”

WHY: Be specific about HOW the writer moves from one idea to the next.

Examples of verbs that describe argumentation: argues claims reveals proposes intervenes Examples of verbs that describe process: examines observes underlines studies explains investigates assumes accentuates       Examples of verbs that describe analysis: critiques questions considers implies suggests concludes
Examples of verbs that describe evidence or examples: demonstrates illustrates describes details lists Examples of verbs that describe rhetorical emphasis: jokes emphasizes quips intones imagines

The rest of the paragraph

Provide details about the main arguments and main ideas of the work.

Use the annotation matrix to fuel the writing.

Represent the text accurately and precisely

Use your own words

NO personal opinion

Set up your argument: how is this summary laying the foundation for your evidence and analysis?

Last Notes

No “I” voice or opinion

NO: “I think this is critical because…”

YES: “This is critical because…”

Refer to author by full name or last name

NO: “Irene argues that….”

YES: “Gedalof argues that…”

Use the present tense

NO: “Gedalof critiqued…”

YES: “Gedalof critiques…”

Write your own first sentence!

Choose an article. Write the first sentence of a summary following this formula:

In gender pronoun genre of text Title of Text capitalized and in quotes or italicized (date), author’s full name active verb main idea/argument.

Use “quotation marks” for the title of an academic journal article, magazine article, newspaper article, essays within a book, article from a website, or report.

Use italics for the title of a book.