

Do not add any additional material or your own thoughts and opinions to the summary.The main purposes of a summary are to reduce the text in length and to write it in your own words. Avoid using quotes from the original author/text.Paraphrase the main ideas from your notes and the text in your own words.Identify the author/s, year, and page range needed for the in-text citation.Make notes from your annotated reading and begin to convert sections into your own words as you do so.Annotate the reading to identify the key ideas/arguments/claims/concepts.go a little deeper and read the abstract, the findings/outcomes (research), and the conclusion to better understand the aims and answers contained in the text.look at headings, sub-headings, images and graphics, and dot-points.Skim and scan the text for the key ideas and concepts.This chapter uses previous techniques you have learnt, such as skimming and scanning (chapter 11), annotated reading (chapter 12), paraphrasing (chapter 9), and referencing (chapter 10). This chapter will help to formalize your understanding of the process and techniques used. In academic writing we can use summarising techniques to condense the ideas of others to support the main points of our own discussions or arguments.
#SYNONYM FOR SUMMARIZE MOVIE#
For example, if you have watched a two hour movie at the cinema and you want to give a synopsis of the overall plot to your friends, you may tell them in ten minutes or less what it took you two hours to watch.

As with paraphrasing, summarising is an everyday skill used to condense information so that it may be relayed to others.
