Transcript Literacy

Mighty Peace Teachers’
Convention 2014
Rick Wormeli
[email protected]
703-620-2447
@rickwormeli (Twitter)
www.rickwormeli.net
Six Word Memoirs
Sample:
“For sale: baby shoes, never worn.” - Ernest Hemingway
Other Samples:
Need more friends or more hobbies.
Old age approaches. Better start now.
My entourage asleep in his crib.
Some shoes will take you anywhere.
Life packed neatly away in boxes.
My greatest ideas involve duct tape.
Two eyes open, but still nearsighted.
Hobby became job. Seeking new hobby.
Let’s make it okay to fail in the pursuit of learning,
and let’s model it. Set up real situations in which we
do not know answers or how to solve problems, then
find the answer or solve the problem constructively so
students see what it looks like to not know something
yet remain a respected individual in the community.
Many students do not push themselves to explore
different talents or new thinking because they are
focused on protecting their reputations as the persons
who always get the right answers. What potential is
lost because a student needs to protect his personal
status quo?
Definition:
Summarization is restating the
essence of text or an experience in
as few words as possible or in a
new yet efficient, manner.
Summarization Tips
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Create or activate personal background.
Prime the brain.
Plan according to the Primacy-Recency
Effect.
Use summary experiences before, during,
and after lessons.
Teach students to recognize familiar text
structures .
Teach students to recognize familiar writing
structures.
Use analogies.
Chunk text and experiences.
More Summarization Tips
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Use reading notations.
Allow students to mark consumable and nonconsumable text.
Emphasize opinion free summaries – no
commentaries.
Teach students to evaluate their own
summarizations.
Set length limit of 10 to 25% original text,
< 1% for longer text.
Encourage two or more readings or
exposures.
Reading Notations
P
I agree with this.
X
I disagree with this.
??
I don’t understand this.
!!
Wow! (‘Elicits a strong emotion)
CL
General Claim
EV
Evidence for the Claim
(These can be numbered to indicate
their sequence, too: EV1, EV2, EV3…)
Word Morphology:
Teach Prefixes, Roots, and Suffixes!
Mal – badly, poor
Meta – beyond, after,
change
Mis – incorrect, bad
Mono – one
Multi – many
Neo – new
Non – not
Ob, of, op, oc – toward,
against
Oct – eight
Paleo – ancient
Para – beside, almost
Penta – five
Per – throughout, completely
Peri – around
Poly – many
Post – after
Pre – before
Pseudo – false
Avoid Confabulation
The brain seeks wholeness. It will fill in the holes in
partial learning with made-up learning and
experiences, and it will convince itself that this
was the original learning all along. To prevent this:
Deal with Misconceptions!
Students should
summarize material they
already understand, not
material they are coming
to know.
Chronological Order
Definition and Key words: This involves putting facts,
events, a concepts into sequence using time
references to order them. Signal words include on
(date), now, before, since, when, not long after, and
gradually.
“Astronomy came a long way in the 1500s and
1600s. In 1531, Halley’s Comet appeared and caused
great panic. Just twelve years later, however,
Copernicus realized that the sun was the center of
the solar system, not the Earth, and astronomy
became a way to understand the natural world, not
something to fear. In the early part of the next
century, Galileo made the first observations with a
new instrument – the telescope. A generation later,
Sir Issac Newton invented the reflecting telescope, a
close cousin to what we use today. Halley’s Comet
returned in 1682 and it was treated as a scientific
wonder, studied by Edmund Halley.”
Compare and Contrast
Defintion and Key words: Explains similarities and
differences. Signal words include however, as well
as, not only, but, while, unless, yet, on the other
hand, either/or, although, similarly, and unlike.
“Middle school gives students more autonomy
than elementary school. While students are asked to
be responsible for their learning in both levels,
middle school students have more pressure to
follow through on assignments on their own, rather
than rely on adults. In addition, narrative forms are
used to teach most literacy skills in elementary
school. On the other hand, expository writing is the
way most information is given in middle school.”
Cause and Effect
Definition and Key words: Shows how something
happens through the impact of something else.
Signal words include because, therefore, as a result,
so that, accordingly, thus, consequently, this led to,
and nevertheless.
“Drug abusers often start in upper elementary
school. They experiment with a parent’s beer and
hard liquor and they enjoy the buzz they receive.
They keep doing this and it starts taking more and
more of the alcohol to get the same level of buzz. As
a result, the child turns to other forms of stimulation
including marijuana. Since these are the initial steps
that usually lead to more hardcore drugs such as
Angel Dust (PCP), heroin, and crack cocaine,
marijuana and alcohol are known as “gateway
drugs.” Because of their addictive nature, these
gateway drugs lead many youngsters who use them
to the world of hardcore drugs.”
Problem and Solution
Definition and Key words: Explains how a difficult situation,
puzzle, or conflict develops, then what was done to solve it.
Signal words are the same as Cause and Effect above.
“The carrying capacity of a habitat refers to the
amount of plant and animal life its resources can
hold. For example, if there are only 80 pounds of
food available and there are animals that together
need more than 80 pounds of food to survive, one or
more animals will die – the habitat can’t “carry”
them. Humans have reduced many habitats’ carrying
capacity by imposing limiting factors that reduce its
carrying capacity such as housing developments,
road construction, dams, pollution, fires, and acid
rain. So that they can maintain full carrying capacity
in forest habitats, Congress has enacted legislation
that protects endangered habitats from human
development or impact. As a result, these areas
have high carrying capacities and an abundance of
plant and animal life.”
Proposition and Support
Defintion and Key words: The author makes a general statement
followed by two or more supporting details. Key words
include: In addition, also, as well as, first, second, finally, in
sum, in support of, therefore, in conclusion.
“There are several reasons that teachers should
create prior knowledge in students before teaching
important concepts. First, very little goes into longterm memory unless it’s attached to something
already in storage. Second, new learning doesn’t
have the meaning necessary for long-term retention
unless the student can see the context in which it
fits. Finally, the brain likes familiarity. It finds
concepts with which it is familiar compelling. In
sum, students learn better when the teacher helps
students to create personal backgrounds with new
topics prior to learning about them.
Claim and Evidence
Defintion and Key words: The author makes a general statement
followed by two or more supporting details. Key words
include: In addition, also, as well as, first, second, finally, in
sum, in support of, therefore, in conclusion.
“There are several reasons that teachers should
create prior knowledge in students before teaching
important concepts. First, very little goes into longterm memory unless it’s attached to something
already in storage. Second, new learning doesn’t
have the meaning necessary for long-term retention
unless the student can see the context in which it
fits. Finally, the brain likes familiarity. It finds
concepts with which it is familiar compelling. In
sum, students learn better when the teacher helps
students to create personal backgrounds with new
topics prior to learning about them.
Enumeration
Definition and Key words: Focuses on listing facts,
characteristics, or features. Signal words include to
begin with, secondly, then, most important, in fact,
for example, several, numerous, first, next finally,
also, for instance, and in addition.
“The moon is our closest neighbor. It’s 250,000
miles away. It’s gravity is only 1/6 that of Earth. This
means a boy weighing 120 pounds in Virginia would
weigh only 20 pounds on the moon. In addition,
there is no atmosphere on the moon. The footprints
left by astronauts back in 1969 are still there, as
crisply formed as they were on the day they were
made. The lack of atmosphere also means there is
no water on the moon, an important problem when
traveling there.”
Text Structures
[Taking Notes with Compare/Contrast]
Concept 1
Concept 2
Components of Blood Content Matrix
Red Cells
Purpose
Carries Oxygen
and Nutrients
Amount
5,000,000 per
CC
Size &
Shape
Nucleus
?
Where
formed
Small, indented,
like Cheerios
None
Bone Marrow,
Spleen
White Cells
Plasma
Platelets
The student’s rough draft:
Red blood cells carry oxygen and
nutrients around the body. They are
small and indented in the middle, like
little Cheerios. There are 5 million per
cc of blood. There is no nucleus in
mature red blood cells. They are formed
in the bone marrow and spleen.
T-List or T-Chart: Wilson’s 14 Points
Main Ideas
Details/Examples
1.
Reasons President Wilson
Designed the Plan for Peace
Three Immediate Effects on
U.S. Allies
2.
3.
1.
2.
3.
Three Structures/Protocols
created by the Plans
1.
2.
3
Cornell Note-Taking Format
Reduce
[Summarize in
short phrases
or essential
questions next
to each block
of notes.]
Record
[Write your notes
on this side.]
Review -- Summarize (paragraph-style)
your points or responses to the questions.
Reflect and comment on what you learned.
Writing to Concisely
[Examples and ideas come from William Brohaugh’s book, Write Tight,
published in 1993 by Writer’s Digest Books, Cincinnati, Ohio.]
Avoid Redundant Phrases and Repeating Yourself (): [P. 185-188]
More additions, absolutely certain/essential/necessary, added bonus,
add up, advance forward, all done, alternative choice, a.m. in the morning,
and also, annual birthday, baby puppy/kitten, blended together, brief
moment, but however, close down, combined together, continue on,
deliberate lie, empty space, end result, exact match, extra bonus, fall down,
fatal suicide, first discovered, foot pedal, forecast the future, foreign
imports, free gift, general public, interpret to mean, large-sized, later on,
major breakthrough, map out, may/might possibly, mental telepathy, natural
instinct, necessary requirement, never before, new beginning, new record,
old antique, orbiting satellite, pair of twins, past
achievement/experience/performance, physically located, plan ahead, p.m.
in the evening, possible candidate, preliminary draft, proceed ahead, raise
up, refer back, repeat over, rise up, same identical, separate individual,
stack together, stand up, switch over, tiny particle, true facts, unexpected
surprise, violent explosion, visible to the eye, weather conditions, while at
the same time, wink an eye, x-ray photograph, young child/puppy/kitten
Loose Wordy Version
Concise Version
A small number of people
Three people
Appear on the scene
Arrived
In back of
Behind
I’m amazed by the fact that you took the
last cookie.
I’m amazed that you took the last
cookie.
For this exam, you need to use a pencil.
For this exam, you need a pencil.
His whole speech bothered me.
His speech bothered me.
John Wilkes Booth was the person who
shot President Lincoln.
John Wilkes Booth shot Abraham
Lincoln.
In order to get the job done, keep at it.
To get the job done, keep at it.
The book devotes an entire chapter to…
The book devotes a chapter to…
Somebody Wanted But So
[Fiction]
Somebody (characters)…
wanted (plot-motivation)…,
but (conflict)…,
so (resolution)… .
Something Happened
And Then
[Non-fiction]
Something (independent variable)…
happened (change in that independent
variable)…,
and (effect on the dependent variable)…,
then (conclusion)… .
When we summarize, we:
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Delete some elements
Keep some elements
Substitute for some elements.
“DKS”
Ask students to memorize these three actions.
TaRGeTS
(Based on Rules-Based Summaries, 1968)
T
- Trivia (Remove trivial material)
R
-
Redundancies (Remove redundant
information)
G
-
Generalize (Replace specifics/lists with
general terms and phrases)
TS -
Determine the Topic Sentence
Topic Sentence
TS = subject + author’s claim about subject
Subject: Dogs
Claim: Make great pets
TS: “Dogs make great pets.”
Help with Paraphrasing
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Build students’ vocabulary and verbal dexterity.
Post word banks. Use vocabulary immersion.
Provide repeated experiences with varied sentence
combinations and word play.
Use repeated think-alouds of a paraphraser at work
from both teacher and students.
Provide ample opportunities to assess
paraphrasings of original text or experience.
Take a page from the active listening lessons -- “So
what you’re saying is…”
Provide repeated experiences with encapsulation
such as creating newspaper headlines.
Play renaming and clue games such as Password,
Taboo, and $25,000 Pyramid.
Evaluating our Summaries
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Does it convey the information accurately?
Is it too narrow or too broad? Does it convey
all of the important elements? Does it convey
too much?
Are the ideas in the right sequence?
Would someone else using this summary
gain all they needed to know to understand
the subject?
Did I leave out my opinion and just report an
undistorted essence of the original content?
Did I use my own words and style?
Writing about Math
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Paragraph 1: What is the problem about?
What am I supposed to find?
Paragraph 2: Step-by-Step explanation:
First, I…, then I…Finally, I…
Paragraph 3: My answer is ______. My
answer makes sense because…
-- Adapted from Kenney, quoting Jubinville, 2005, p. 38
Concept Ladder
(J.W. Gillet, C. Temple, 1986, as described in Inside Words, Janet Allen)
Concept:
Causes of:
Effects of:
Language associated with:
Words that mean the same as:
Historical examples:
Contemporary examples:
Evidence of:
Literature connections made:
3-2-1
3 – Identify three characteristics of Renaissance art
that differed from art of the Middle Ages
2 – List two important scientific debates that occurred
during the Renaissance
1 – Provide one good reason why “rebirth” is an
appropriate term to describe the Renaissance
3 – List three applications for slope, y-intercept
knowledge in the professional world
2 – Identify two skills students must have in order to
determine slope and y-intercept from a set of points
on a plane
1 – If (x1, y1) are the coordinates of a point W in a
plane, and (x2, y2) are the coordinates of a different
point Y, then the slope of line WY is what?
3-2-1
3 – Identify at least three differences
between acids and bases
2 – List two uses of acids and two uses
of bases
1 – State one reason why knowledge of
acids and bases is important to
citizens in our community
Backwards Summaries
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“Make the web from which this paragraph came.”
“Here’s the completed math solution. What would
happen if I had never considered the absolute value
of x?”
“Here’s the final French translation of this sentence.
What if I had not checked the tense of each verb?”
“Here’s a well done concerto. What happens if I
remove the oboe’s eight measures on page 4?”
“Here’s a well-done lab procedure. What happens if I
don’t use distilled water?”
Save the Last Word for Me
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Students read the passage, making notations as they go.
They identify three or more sentences to which they have a
response.
Place students in groups of 3 to 5, then ask one member of
each group to read a line that he has identified. He reads only;
there is no commentary or reason for choosing it given.
Each group member other than the reading person responds to
that one line – agreeing, refuting, supporting, clarifying,
commenting, or questioning.
After everyone else has had a chance to make a personal
response to the statement, the originator of the line gets to
offer his or her commentary – “getting the last word” on the
topic.
When this round of discussion is done, the next person in the
circle calls out his chosen line from the text, and everyone
responds to the line before this second person offers his
commentary. So it goes with each member of the group.
Change the Point of View
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Tell the story of digestion from the points of view of
the bolus passing down the esophagus, the villi in
the small intestine that have capillaries receiving and
carrying nutrients to the bloodstream, or a muscle in
the body that finally receives the nutrients from the
food ingested earlier.
Re-tell an historical incident from a biased
participant’s point of view.
Reveal the truth behind a pronoun being a subject or
an object based on which one did the action and
which one received the action.
Re-tell the account of a scientific, mathematical, or
manufacturing process, a moment in history, a
chemical’s reaction, a concerto’s performance, or a
comma’s position in a sentence.
The Frayer Model
[Frayer, Frederick, Klausmeier, 1969]
Essential
Characteristics
Non- Essential
Characteristics
< Topic >
Examples
Nonexamples
“Word Link”
1.
2.
3.
4.
Each student gets a word.
In partners, students share the link(s)
between their individual words.
Partner team joins another partner team,
forming a “word cluster.”
All four students identify the links among
their words and share those links with
the class.
-- Yopp, Ruth Helen. “Word Links: A Strategy for Developing Word
Knowledge,” Voices in the Middle, Vol. 15, Number 1, September
2007, National Council Teachers of English
Summarization Pyramid
__________
______________
____________________
_________________________
______________________________
___________________________________
Great prompts for each line: Synonym, analogy,
question, three attributes, alternative title, causes,
effects, reasons, arguments, ingredients, opinion,
larger category, formula/sequence, insight, tools,
misinterpretation, sample, people, future of the
topic
One-Word Summaries
“The new government regulations for the meatpacking industry in the 1920’s could be seen
as an opportunity…,”
“Picasso’s work is actually an argument for….,”
“NASA’s battle with Rockwell industries over
the warnings about frozen temperatures and
the O-rings on the space shuttle were trench
warfare….”
Basic Idea: Argue for or against the word as a
good description for the topic.
Exclusion Brainstorming
The student identifies the word/concept that
does not belong with the others, then either orally or
in writing explains his reasoning:
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Mixtures – plural, separable, dissolves, no formula
Compounds – chemically combined, new properties,
has formula, no composition
Solutions – heterogeneous mixture, dissolved
particles, saturated and unsaturated, heat increases
Suspensions – clear, no dissolving, settles upon
standing, larger than molecules
Share One, Get One
Analyze…
Revise…
Decide between…
Why did…
Defend…
Devise…
Identify…
Classify…
Define…
Compose…
Interpret…
Expand…
Develop…
Suppose…
Imagine…
Construct…
Rank…
Argue against…
Argue for…
Contrast…
Develop…
Plan…
Critique…
Rank…
Organize…
Interview…
Predict…
Categorize…
Invent…
Recommend…
In-Out Game: Students determine the
classification a teacher’s statements exemplify, then
they confirm their hypothesis by offering elements “in
the club” and elements “out of the club.” They don’t
identify the club, just the items in and out of it. If the
students’ suggestions fit the pattern, the teacher
invites them to be a part of the club. The game
continues until everyone is a member.
Example: She is in the club but the class is not. They are in the
club, but the penguins are not. You are in the club, but the
donuts are not. Give me something in and out of the club.” A
student guesses correctly that the club is for personal pronouns,
so she says, “We are in the club, but moon rocks are not.” To
make it a bit more complex, announce the club’s elements and
non-elements in unusual ways that must also be exemplified by
the students, such as making all the items in and out of the club
alliterative or related in some way. This can be as obvious or as
complex as you want it to be.
Descriptions With and Without
Metaphors
Friendship
Infinity
Solving for a variable
Euphoria
Worry
Obstructionist Judiciary
Immigration
Balance
Economic Principles
Poetic License
Heuristics
Embarrassment
Family
Imperialism
Trust
Mercy
Trouble
Honor
Homeostasis
Temporal Rifts
Religious fervor
Semantics
Tautology
Knowledge
Same Concept, Multiple Domains
The Italian Renaissance: Symbolize curiosity,
technological advancement, and cultural shifts
through mindmaps, collages, graphic organizers,
paintings, sculptures, comic strips, political
cartoons, music videos, websites, computer
screensavers, CD covers, or advertisements
displayed in the city subway system.
The economic principle of supply and demand:
What would it look like as a floral arrangement, in
the music world, in fashion, or dance? Add some
complexity: How would each of these expressions
change if were focusing on a bull market or the
economy during a recession?
Premise:
There is not any
curriculum so symbolic
or abstract that we
cannot “physicalize” it
for better student
learning.
Physicalizing Process:
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Identify essential components, pieces, or
definition of whatever we’re teaching
Physicalize those pieces and present them to
the class.
Class critiques the physicalization in terms
of accuracy, comprehensiveness,
appropriateness, and clarity. ‘Makes
suggestions for improvement.
All three steps are learning experiences that
help students internalize the knowledge.
Highly Recommended for Summarization Ideas
Check out NCTE’s ReadWriteThink.org Web site!
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Allen, Janet. Yellow Brick Roads: Shared and Guided Paths to
Independent Reading 4-12, Stenhouse Publishers, 2000
Allen, Janet. Words, Words, Words: Teaching Vocabulary in
Grades 4-12, Stenhouse Publishers, 1999
Allen, Janet. Tools for Teaching Content Literacy (flipbook),
Stenhouse, 2004
Billmeyer, Rachel, Ph.D.; Barton, Mary Lee. Teaching Reading in
the Content Areas: If Not Me, Then Who? 2nd Edition McREL (Midcontinent Research for Education and Learning, 1998
Barton, Mary Lee; Heidema, Clare. Teaching Reading in
Mathematics, ASCD, McREL (Mid-continent Research for Education
and Learning, 2000 (Also distributed by ASCD)
Beers, Kylene. When Kids Can’t Read: What Teachers Can Do,
Heinemann, 2003
Beers, Kylene and Samuels, Barabara G. (1998) Into Focus:
Understanding and Creating Middle School Readers. Norwood,
Massachusetts: Christopher-Gordon Publishers, Inc.
Highly Recommended for Summarization Ideas
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Buehl, Doug. Classroom Strategies for Interactive Learning (second Edition)
(2001) Newark, Delaware, International Reading Association, Inc.
Burke, Jim. Illuminating Texts: How to Teach Students to Read the World,
Heinemann, 2001
Burkhardt, Ross M. Writing for Real: Strategies for Engaging Adolescent
Writers, Stenhouse Publishers, 2003
Frender, Gloria. Learning to Learn: Strengthening Study Skills and Brain
Power, Incentive Publications, Inc., 1990
Forsten, Char; Grant, Jim; Hollas, Betty. Differentiated Instruction: Different
Strategies for Different Learners, Crystal Springs Books, 2001 [This is great
for K-8]
Forsten, Char: Grant, Jim; Hollas, Betty. Differentiating Textbooks:
Strategies to Improve Student Comprehension and Motivation, Crystal
Springs Books
Glynn, Carol. Learning on their Feet: A Sourcebook for Kinesthetic
Learning Across the Curriculum, Discover Writing Press, 2001
Harvey, Stephanie (1998) Nonfiction Matters: Reading, Writing, and
Research in Grades 3 – 8. Portsmouth,Maine: Stenhouse Publishers
Harvey, Stephanie; Goudvis, Anne. Strategies that Work: Teaching
Comprehension to Enhance Understanding, Stenhouse Publishers, 2000
Hyerle, David. A Field Guide to Visual Tools, ASCD, 2000
Highly Recommended for Summarization Ideas
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Marzano, Robert J.; Pickering, Debra J.; Pollock, Jane E.
Classroom Instruction that Works: Research-based Strategies for
Increasing Student Achievement, ASCD, 2001
Robb, Laura. Teaching Reading in Middle School. Scholastic, 2000
Robb, Laura (editor). Reader’s Handbook, Great Source Education
Group, Houghtoun-Mifflin (Same group that does Write Source 2000
and Writer’s, Inc.)
Sousa, Dr. David A. How the Brain Learns. Corwin Press, 2002
Spandel, Vicki; Stiggins, Richard J. Creating Writers: Linking
Writing Assessment and Instruction, Longman Publishers, 1997
Stephens, Elaine C. and Brown, Jean E. (2000) A Handbook of
Content Literacy Strategies: 75 Practical Reading and Writing Ideas.
Norwood, Massachusetts: Christopher-Gordon Publishers, Inc.
Strong, Richard W.; Silver, Harvey F.; Perini, Matthew J.; Tuculescu,
Gregory M. Reading for Academic Success: Powerful Strategies for
Struggling, Average, and Advanced Readers, Grades 7-12, Corwin
Press, 2002
Highly Recommended for Summarization Ideas
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Tovani, Cris. I Read It, But I Don’t Get It. Stenhouse
Publishers, 2001
Tovani, Cris. Do I Really Have to Teach Reading?
Content Comprehension Grades 6-12, Stenhouse, 2004
Vacca, R. and Vacca J. (1999) Content Area Reading:
Literacy and Learning Across the Curriculum. 6th ed.
New York: Longman
Wood, Karen D.; Harmon, Janis M. Strategies for
Integrating Reading and Writing in Middle and High
School Classrooms, National Middle School Association,
2001
Wormeli, Rick. Summarization in any Subject, ASCD,
2005
Wormeli, Rick. Metaphors & Analogies: Power Tools for
Teaching any Subject, Stenhouse, 2009
Zinsser, William. Writing to Learn (1988)New York:
Harper and Row Publishers
Reflecting on Summarizing:
“I used to
think…,
but now
I think…”