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“Her Point of View”
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“Her Point of View”. Writing only your own opinions with no mention of the person or article you are summarizing is not a good summary. Writing only.

Dec 14, 2015

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Aldous West
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Page 1: “Her Point of View”.  Writing only your own opinions with no mention of the person or article you are summarizing is not a good summary.  Writing only.

“Her Point of View”

Page 2: “Her Point of View”.  Writing only your own opinions with no mention of the person or article you are summarizing is not a good summary.  Writing only.

Writing only your own opinions with no mention of the person or article you are summarizing is not a good summary.

Writing only a summary with no “voice” from the summarizer is not a good summary.

Page 3: “Her Point of View”.  Writing only your own opinions with no mention of the person or article you are summarizing is not a good summary.  Writing only.

Balance what the original author is saying with the your own focus.

Must be true to what the original author says while emphasizing aspects that interest you, the writer of a summary.

Page 4: “Her Point of View”.  Writing only your own opinions with no mention of the person or article you are summarizing is not a good summary.  Writing only.

Balance is being respectful of the other while summarizing in light of your own perspective.

Summarizing is a demonstration of respect.

Page 5: “Her Point of View”.  Writing only your own opinions with no mention of the person or article you are summarizing is not a good summary.  Writing only.

You suspend your own beliefs for a time to listen to the other.

This is the “believing” stage. Try to see who the other is and what she

believes. The reader of your summary should not be

able to tell whether you agree or disagree with the ideas of the author.

Page 6: “Her Point of View”.  Writing only your own opinions with no mention of the person or article you are summarizing is not a good summary.  Writing only.

A good summary tells the reader enough about the article, so that he can discern the ideas of the article independent of you.

Page 7: “Her Point of View”.  Writing only your own opinions with no mention of the person or article you are summarizing is not a good summary.  Writing only.

leads to a weak summary. leads to expressing a cliché and not the

ideas of the author. leads to writing something that you have

already heard or read. leads to perpetuating biases and

preconceptions.

Page 8: “Her Point of View”.  Writing only your own opinions with no mention of the person or article you are summarizing is not a good summary.  Writing only.

A summary has your slant or spin to it as well as doing justice to the author.

When writing a summary, you have joint custody of the article with the author.

Page 9: “Her Point of View”.  Writing only your own opinions with no mention of the person or article you are summarizing is not a good summary.  Writing only.

demonstrates walking in the shoes of the author while reflecting your own voice.

is a delicate balance that takes practice.

Page 10: “Her Point of View”.  Writing only your own opinions with no mention of the person or article you are summarizing is not a good summary.  Writing only.

Use verbs that fit the action. “he says” “it talks” “he discusses” are just

boring with no action Action verbs are argue, assert, believe, claim, observe verify, support, agree, acknowledge advocate, demand, urge, recommend

Page 11: “Her Point of View”.  Writing only your own opinions with no mention of the person or article you are summarizing is not a good summary.  Writing only.

Present major points, omitting details A summary sentence begins the summary

paragraph, a topic sentence. No opinions just your “voice” Cite the source being summarized in MLA

format Maximum – 125 words

Page 12: “Her Point of View”.  Writing only your own opinions with no mention of the person or article you are summarizing is not a good summary.  Writing only.

Graff, Gerald, Cathy Birkenstein, and Russel Durst. They Say, I Say. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2006.

Ramage, John D. et.al. Writing Arguments; A Rhetoric with Readings. Third Edition. New York: Pearson Education, 2004.

Coyner, Sandra. Professor Emerita, Southern Oregon University