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Summarizing and Retelling For Reading Text

Summarizing involves identifying the main idea and key facts of a text and writing a brief overview including only those essential elements. A good strategy for summarizing stories is "Somebody Wanted But So Then", which uses questions about the main character, their goal, an obstacle, how they solved the problem, and the ending. Retelling a story is used to assess a student's comprehension by having them recount the major events and characters in sequential order while excluding unnecessary details. Effective retelling includes the main character, their traits, the problem, solution, and events in order.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
44 views

Summarizing and Retelling For Reading Text

Summarizing involves identifying the main idea and key facts of a text and writing a brief overview including only those essential elements. A good strategy for summarizing stories is "Somebody Wanted But So Then", which uses questions about the main character, their goal, an obstacle, how they solved the problem, and the ending. Retelling a story is used to assess a student's comprehension by having them recount the major events and characters in sequential order while excluding unnecessary details. Effective retelling includes the main character, their traits, the problem, solution, and events in order.

Uploaded by

Hafidhah Razali
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Summarizing and Retelling for

Reading Text
What is summarizing?
According to Bales Kris (2020) states that
Summarizing means identifying the main idea and
most important facts, then writing a brief overview
that includes only those key ideas and details.
A good summary is short and to the point. The
following easy summarizing strategies will help your
students chose the correct details from the text and
write about them clearly and concisely.
Somebody, Wanted, But, So, Then
“Somebody Wanted But So Then” is an excellent
summarizing strategy for stories. Each word represents
a key question related to the story's essential elements:
Somebody: Who is the story about?
Wanted: What does the main charter want?
But: Identify a problem that the main character
encountered.
So: How does the main character solve the problem?
Then: Tell how the story ends.
Here is an example of this strategy in action:
Somebody: Little Red Riding Hood
Wanted: She wanted to take cookies to her sick
grandmother.
But: She encountered a wolf pretending to be her
grandmother.
So: She ran away, crying for help.
Then: A woodsman heard her and saved her from
the wolf.
After answering the questions, combine the answers to
form a summary:

Little Red Riding Hood wanted to take cookies to her


sick grandmother, but she encountered a wolf. He got
to her grandmother’s house first and pretended to be
the old woman. He was going to eat Little Red Riding
Hood, but she realized what he was doing and ran
away, crying for help. A woodsman heard the girl’s
cries and saved her from the wolf.
What is retelling?
According to Jenning,Caldwell &Lerner (2014 p 268)
states that Retelling is a strategy that is used to
determine how well a student has comprehended a
specific story. Retelling can be used as an effective
tool in improving comprehension as well as assessing
it.
What does it mean to retell a story?
According to Jennie (2018) said that Retelling a
story is a way for teachers to understand how well a
student is comprehending a specific text.  During a
retelling, teachers can learn what the student thinks
is important in that specific text. Retelling, however,
looks different depending on the grade level. 
Leslie and Caldwell (2001) describe guidelines for
evaluating a retelling. Retellings should include: Presence
of the major character(s)
Defining characteristics of the characters
Problem presented in the story
Solution to that problem (or the end)
Events presented in sequential order
Ability to include only those events important to the story
and exclude unimportant events
Here are the five easy steps:
Preview the book. Talk about the title and pictures
with your child.
Read the book. You can read the book, your child can
read the book, or you can read it together.
Ask your child to retell what they read. ...
Reread the book.
Ask your child to retell again.

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