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Reading Writing Exercise 4 (Summary Writing)
Reading Writing Exercise 4 (Summary Writing)
(Summary writing)
Now, it gets hard!
What is a summary? The formal definition is: a brief statement or account of the
main points of something. And that’s exactly what you have to do. Identify the
main, relevant points and write them in your own words in an organized
manner.
This is the part of the paper I, personally, had the most trouble with. It is not
as easy as it looks. So, let’s get to it.
w17_qp22. See the emboldened part? That”s what you have to focus on.
Read the passage.
As you go, underline the points that you need to include in your summary,
that are relevant and important to the question.
Write a one-line introduction that tells the examiner what you’re writing a
summary on. Keep it short. In the example above, you could start the
summary by writing : Poon Lim, a ship-wreck victim, managed to survive an
astounding 133 days on an island all alone.
Start organising the points. You could do it chronologically, advantage-
disadvantage format or problem-solution format- whatever works for the
task at hand. In the example above, writing points in their chronological
order seems to be the right choice since it’s a narrative type of article.
Use connectives, lots of them, to organise your points and add a sense of
continuity. Some examples are: Firstly/Secondly/Thirdly, In
Addition/Also/Furthermore, Consequently/As a result, Thus/Hence etc.
Use your own words. Use synonyms of word in the passage, if possible.
In the example above, the phrase ‘invented ways to find food and
water’ can be changed to ‘came up with a system to obtain food and water’.
You don’t have to write a conclusion. If the question asked you to write
the summary on the entire passage, then maybe a conclusion would be
fitting. But in questions like the one above, it is irrelevant to the question.
Stick to the word limit. For the extended paper you have to write at least
100 word but not more than 120 words. For the core paper you need to
write at least 70 word but not more than 80 words. Don’t write too much;
scrap unnecessary points not relevant to the question; cut short words.
That’s all about Exercise 4! The best way to get better at it, is to keep
practicing past paper questions, nothing more. Polishing up your vocabulary
skills might be helpful in using your own words.
Time Management
The summary writing exercise in the core paper 1 is too easy, so it should only
take about 5 minutes to attempt it.
Spend about 15 minutes on this exercise, in the extended paper 2. Reading the
passage should take about 5 minutes and the rest 10 minutes should be used
to write your summary.