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Thursday, December 6, 2012 Sentence Combining Comparison Writing Honors: Summary Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

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Page 1: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Sentence Combining

Comparison Writing

Honors: Summary

Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

Page 2: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

Sentence Combining

Complete Page 82 as a class

Homework: Exercise 2 (1-5)

Page 3: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

Sequence Writing

Write a paragraph giving a friend the steps to making your favorite Christmas recipe.

Begin by prewriting. Make a flow map on your paper with at least 7-10 steps.

Next take flow map and write complete sentences making a well formed paragraph. Don’t forget transition words!

Page 4: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

Comparison Writing

We will be writing an essay explaining whether it is better to work by yourself or with a group. Read the quote and think about working alone-vs-working in a group.

Complete Venn Diagram comparing and contrasting the similarities and differences.

Write a 7-10 sentence paragraph.

Page 5: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

A Recipe for a Summary

Page 6: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

Definition of a Summary

What is a summary?

A summary briefly restates the most important information or ideas in a passage.

A good summary describes the most important information of the passage as a whole, not just the beginning and the end, not just the middle, not just any part, but as a whole.

Page 7: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

Step One: Divide and Conquer

First off, skim the text you are going to summarize and, if it is longer than one paragraph, divide it into sections. Focus on any headings and subheadings. Also, look at any bold-faced terms.

Page 8: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

Step Two: Read

Now that you’ve prepared, go ahead and read the selection. Read straight through. At this point, you don’t need to stop to figure out anything that gives you trouble – just get a feel for the author’s tone, style, and main idea.

Page 9: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

Step Three: Reread

Rereading should be active reading. Underline topic sentences and key facts.

Label areas that should be referred to in a summary. Cross-out areas that should be avoided because the details –

though they may be interesting – are too specific. Identify areas that you do not understand and use context clues

and your knowledge of roots and affixes to clarify those points.

Page 10: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

Step Four: Identify the Main Idea

The main idea of a passage may be stated directly in a topic sentence, which may appear anywhere in the passage.

Sometimes, the main idea is not stated directly but is implied, or suggested, by the details in the passage.

Page 11: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

Step Five: Create (or identify)

Write or find a summary that leaves out the unimportant details and focuses on the most important information from the passage.

A full-paragraph summary is needed for longer passages, and this type of summary will contain a sentence that states the main idea plus supporting sentences that tell the important information in the passage.

To summarize only a paragraph, a summary may be only one sentence, and it will still contain all of the important information. “Synthesize” – put it together

Page 12: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

Review Time

What is a summary?

A summary briefly restates the most important information or ideas in a passage.

A good summary describes the most important information of the passage as a whole, not just the beginning and the end, not just the middle, not just any part, but as a whole.

Page 13: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

What are the first four steps of “A Recipe for a Summary”

Step 1 Divide and Conquer: Skim the text, divide it into sections, focus on headings, subheadings, and bold-faced terms.

Step 2 Read: Don’t stop to figure-out anything just get a feel for the passage and its main idea.

Page 14: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

Still Reviewing (Steps 3 & 4)

Step 3 Reread: Be active. Underline topic sentences and key facts, cross-out unnecessary details. Use context clues, roots, and affixes to figure out words or sections you do not understand.

Step 4 Identify the Main Idea: stated – the passage tells its point to you explicitly; implied – the point is suggested, but not stated out-loud (you have to infer the main idea)

Page 15: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

What is the final step?

Step 5 Create (or identify): leave out the unimportant details, focus on the most important information, a large passage (a page or more) needs a one-paragraph summary, a small (only a paragraph itself) usually needs just a one-sentence summary

Page 16: Thursday, December 6, 2012  Sentence Combining  Comparison Writing  Honors: Summary  Homework: Read for AR, Exercise 2 (1-5)

Modern Day Miracle(Honors)

Go over the answers to A Modern Day Miracle

Reread A Modern Day Miracle and go through the steps of summarizing.

Summarize the passage.