What summary writing is — and isn't
The most common mistake: thinking summary = copying the best sentences. It doesn't.
Summary writing is NOT:
- Copying sentences from the text.
- Selecting and quoting the best phrases.
- Writing everything you found in the text.
- Giving your opinion on the topic.
Summary writing IS:
- Identifying only the points relevant to the stated focus.
- Rewriting those points in your own words (paraphrasing).
- Organising them logically within the word limit.
Why this matters: Cambridge mark schemes award marks for own words. If you copy a phrase from the text, even if it's the right information, you may not score the mark for it — because the skill being tested is paraphrase, not retrieval.
The three-step summary process:
- Read the question and underline the focus. What specifically must you summarise?
- Read the text(s) and number the relevant points — ignore everything else.
- Rewrite each point in your own words — then connect them into flowing prose.
- Step 1: Underline the focus in the question.
- Step 2: Find relevant points in the text (number them).
- Step 3: Rewrite in your own words → connect → check word count.