Summary
Condensing key points from a passage into a brief overview, showing overall understanding.
What is Summary?
Summary questions test your ability to identify the most important points in a passage and express them briefly. You need to separate the main ideas from the supporting details and write concisely.
Step-by-Step Method
Read the passage and identify the main ideas
Ask yourself: what are the 3-4 most important things this passage is about?
Separate main points from details
Ignore minor details, examples and descriptions. Focus on the key facts or events.
Use your own words
Do not copy sentences from the text. Rephrase the key points.
Be concise
A summary should be much shorter than the original. Every word should count.
Check you have covered all the main points
Read the passage again to make sure you have not missed anything important.
Worked Examples
Summarise a passage about a boy joining a new school.
Working
- Main points: 1) Boy starts at a new school, 2) He feels nervous, 3) He makes a friend at lunch, 4) He feels more confident by the end of the day.
- Write these as 2-3 concise sentences.
In one sentence, summarise the main argument of a persuasive passage about school uniforms.
Working
- The passage argues that uniforms reduce bullying, save money and create a sense of belonging.
- Combine into one sentence.
Summarise the key events of a story passage.
Working
- Beginning: character finds a map.
- Middle: follows the map to a hidden cave.
- End: discovers treasure but decides to leave it.
Common Mistakes
Including too much detail – retelling the whole passage instead of summarising.
Only include the MAIN points. If a detail could be removed without changing the meaning, leave it out.
Copying directly from the text.
Use your own words to show you understand the content.
Missing the main point while including minor details.
Ask yourself: if I could only say ONE thing about this passage, what would it be? Start there.
Top Tips
- A good summary answers: who, what, when, where, why – but only the essential details.
- Try to keep your summary to about a quarter of the length of the original.
- Start with the most important point first.
- Use connectives like “then”, “however”, “finally” to link your summary points smoothly.
Ready to practise?
Put these techniques into action with our free practice papers.
Practise English Questions