How
to Write a Summary-and-Response Essay Assignment The Summary-and-Response essay
assignment teaches us how to incorporate another writer’s words with our
own. The process begins by carefully reading another writer’s
essay. We then begin our essay with an opening paragraph that identifies
the writer, the name of the essay we read, and briefly summarizes its
content. The rest of our essay is made of our words and ideas with
selected words from the other essay occasionally blended in for added effect
and impact. The best way to get a sense for the structure of a
summary-and-response essay is to study a few examples, so please do the
following: Begin by reading the professional
essays below and the student examples that follow. First, notice
how each student essay begins with a paragraph that identifies the author,
the professional essay, and provides a brief summary of the professional
essay’s main point. Second, notice how the rest of the student
essay is the student’s words and ideas with occasional words from the
professional essay blended in for impact and effect. Finally, notice
how the student credits the use of the other writer’s words. Here are the five requirements of
the first paragraph in list form. 1. name the author 2. name the work 3. add a brief summary 4. build a bridge to
your thesis (a transition) 5. state your thesis
at the end of the paragraph As a first example, please read
the professional essay Don’t Let Stereotypes Warp Your Judgments by Robert Heilbroner. Once
done, study the two student examples that follow, by locating the
requirements mentioned above. Also study how both writers blended Heilbroner’s words with their own and credited Heilbroner for the words that were his. Student Summary-and-Response Example #1—Heilbroner Student Summary-and-Response Example #2--Heilbroner Here is
yet another example. First, view the Information Literacy video Using the ProQuest Database.
(Alternatively, you can go the ProQuest Database,
located in the SCC
Library's databases, and explore on your own.) Then use your new-found
skills to locate and read the professional essay "I'm Still
Learning from My Mother" by Cliff
Schneider in ProQuest. After reading
Schneider’s essay, please return to this page, and then read the student
example, keeping the following in mind:
Notice in this student
sample that the writer has fulfilled the five requirements above by using two
paragraphs rather than one. (This is because the first paragraph offers a
much more extensive summary.) In the first paragraph, the student writer
identifies the author, the essay, and offers a detailed summary (requirements
1, 2, and 3). The student writer then uses a second paragraph to provides a transition that leads into the thesis stated in
the final sentence (requirements 4 and 5). Student Example Summary-and-Response to "Still
Learning From My Mother" by Cliff Schneider IMPORTANT NOTE: Before
beginning your Summary-and-Response essay, please be sure you have
watched and understood the Information Literacy video "Working with Words from a Source--MLA Video" and/or
have read and understood the information in the "Working
with Words from a Source" lesson. A substantial part of your grade
on this essay will be determined by how well you have mastered
blending others' words with your own, so you will likely need to refer to Working
with Words from a Source quite often. |