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Summarizing and Note-taking

Resources for supporting reading for meaning

by Declan FitzPatrick

Summarizing and Note-taking

Overview

This page is designed to provide students with four options for taking notes about short non-fiction articles or textbook chapters. The four choices of organizer will match with different thinking styles while each one maintains the minimum requirements for good note-taking. 

Using these note-taking devices will allow students to match the activity with their learning styles, while at the same time  providing the teacher with an authentic assessment of what their students  understand  and remember.

To view the student handout as a Word document, click the image to the right.

The four styles are:

Idea Magnets

Idea Cluster

T-Chart

Main Idea I

All of the organizers have space for the three essential parts:

        Topic/Main Idea

        Sub-topics

        Details

 

Before reading students will: 

Choose the organizer that best fits their thinking style.

Preview the article until they can identify the topic in their own words.

Guess at what they think the subtopics will be.

You can provide a lot of support and modeling with this step, including providing them with an identified topic and sub-topics, but be sure to leave them with enough room to make their own choices about what is important.

 

While they read students will:

Identify subtopics and significant details.

Some students will prefer to fill out the organizer while they read, others will prefer to make annotations within the text as they find sub-topics, and fill out the organizer after reading.

 

After they read students will:

Fill out organizer.

Turn “topic” into “main idea.” A topic says what the article is about (or who is doing what where). A main idea answers the question “What is the author saying about [topic]?”

Topic/Main Idea: Writing  good "Main Idea" or summary sentences requires lots of practice, support, and modeling. Student should be encouraged to write complex main idea sentences that take into account all of the important sub-topics in the article.

 

Turn this
into
this

Topic—

  •  subject of the article
  •  few words or a phrase
  •  says who, what, and where

 

Main Idea—

  •  comment about the topic
  •  complex sentence (often includes “because”)
  •  explains significance

If you can’t turn the topic into a main idea, you don’t “get it” yet.

Go back and turn each of your subtopics into a sentence, then try again with the main idea.

 

    

Idea Magnets (MS Word File)                Idea Cluster (Inspiration file)

                                                          Idea Cluster (MS Word File)

     

T-Chart (MS Word file)                          Main Idea I (MS Word file)

Summarizing and note-taking--Complete Document (MS Word file)

 

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