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Summarizing is an important skill for students for | Summarizing is an important skill for students for | ||
* textual comprehension | * textual comprehension | ||
* | * application of ideas | ||
== Summarizing == | == Summarizing == | ||
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** processing in one's own words | ** processing in one's own words | ||
=== Elements of summarizing | === Bloom's taxonomy of learning === | ||
[[File:Blooms rose.svg|thumb|Blooms rose]] | |||
* Summarizing is an important fundamental step towards higher-order thought | |||
* per Bloom's "taxonomy" of learning | |||
** summarizing is part of the 2nd order learning category, "Comprehension" | |||
*** therefore, summarizing is essential for comprehension | |||
*** along with summarizing, per Bloom's taxonomy "Comprehension" also includes | |||
**** ''restatement, paraphrasing, illustrating, explaining, distinguishing, extending'' | |||
== Elements of summarizing == | |||
=== Active reading === | === Active reading === | ||
* | * thinking while reading = | ||
** applying prior knowledge | ** applying prior knowledge | ||
** identifying new knowledge (unfamiliar words, ideas, details) | ** identifying new knowledge (unfamiliar words, ideas, details) | ||
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*** ex. "Mackie is a happy little black, brown & red dog who loves to play with his toys" | *** ex. "Mackie is a happy little black, brown & red dog who loves to play with his toys" | ||
**** "little" and "black, brown and red" do not change the meaning that "Mackie is a happy dog who loves to play with toys" | **** "little" and "black, brown and red" do not change the meaning that "Mackie is a happy dog who loves to play with toys" | ||
== Techniques for summarizing == | |||
=== Re-statement of words & sentences === | === Re-statement of words & sentences === | ||
* summarization is | * summarization requires comprehension | ||
** but it is a skill that can be taught | |||
* student comprehension is enhanced by re-stating in one's own words | |||
** it helps to discern what the student actually understands | |||
==== "Teaching it back" ==== | |||
* one method to enhance summarization and student comprehension is to engage the student in "teaching it back" to someone else | |||
** "''you can't teach it if you don't know it''" works as a good measure of student comprehension in any subject or skill | |||
** in summarization it is helpful becuase it forces the student to articulate his or her own comprehension | |||
** if the student gets stuck, the teacher can ask the student to identify Prior Knowledge: | |||
*** i.e., "Well, what do you know from this passage? | |||
*** and build up comprehension from there | |||
==== Asking questions ==== | |||
* question formulation is a process of | |||
** 1. identifying prior knowledge (what is understood or familiar) | |||
** 2. identifying new knowledge (what is not understood or familiar) | |||
** and 3. extending that prior knowledge by asking a question about it or the new knowledge | |||
==== Thinking up titles ==== | |||
* Titles are summaries | |||
** ask the student to give each passage segment a title | |||
== Lesson Plan example or student exercise == | == Lesson Plan example or student exercise == |