Lesson Plan
Simple Summaries
Keep it simple! Teach your students to write a summary using the Somebody-Wanted-But-So-Then frame for analyzing a story.
Grades:
Subjects:
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Learning Objectives
Students will be able to write a simple summary after reading a fiction text.
Introduction
(10 minutes)- Ask students to turn and talk to a partner about what they know about summaries. Have partnerships share out and record student answers on the board.
- Tell students that today they are going to learn how to write a simple summary.
- Review the definition of a summary: When you write a summary, you are retelling a story in your own words. A summary should be short, about three sentences, and should include the main ideas of the story, not details.
- Explain to students that they will listen to a story and you will model how to write a simple summary. Read a short story aloud, like The Paper Bag Princess by Robert Munsch.
Beginning:
- Ask students to talk to a partner about the definition of the word summary using English or their home language (L1).
- Provide a student-friendly definition of the word* main ideas* and details.
Intermediate:
- Show an example of a summary of a text that the class recently read.
- Have ELs rephrase the definition and qualities of a summary. Provide a sentence stem for student conversation, such as "A good summary __________."