Summarizing Teaching Resources
Teach students to summarize fiction and non-fiction texts with printable worksheets, graphic organizers, anchor charts, digital activities and more teaching resources created for your elementary classroom.
Designed by teachers, for teachers, the resources in this collection are aligned with both TEKS and Common Core curriculum standards. Each resource has undergone a careful review by a member of our expert teaching team to ensure they help students build foundational literacy skills.
You'll find editable versions to easily differentiate your instruction for individual students, plus a variety of options to make lesson planning easier this school year so your students will be able to identify the main idea of a text, draw inferences, remember key details and more.
New to teaching this portion of the English curriculum or just looking for fresh and engaging ways to teach students how to summarize paragraphs and articles? Read on for a primer from our teacher team!
What Is Summarizing? A Kid-Friendly Definition
Summarizing is an important reading comprehension strategy for kids to learn, but are you looking for ways to explain what it means to your class? Try this kid-friendly summarizing definition!
Summarizing is a way that we retell the main idea and key details from a story in our own words. When we summarize, we are able to share a large amount of information from a paragraph or article in a shorter version.
Why Is Summarizing Important?
Learning to identify the main idea and key details in a text helps young readers better understand what they have read and retain the information more effectively.
From there, summarizing helps students develop their writing skills, requiring them to synthesize the information they've learned and present it clearly and concisely in summary form.
Teaching Students How to Summarize
Before students learn to summarize, they typically learn to retell a story — recalling and describing the key events and details of a story in the order they occur. Summarizing is related to retelling, but it's a more nuanced and advanced skill that kids develop later in elementary school.
To summarize an article or a paragraph, students need to learn to choose details carefully rather than describing the story or paragraph in full. They need to condense just the most important information from the story into a brief overview or synopsis called a summary.
They also have to select and prioritize information so they can present it concisely in a way that makes sense to the reader.
When summarizing, students may complete one or more of the following:
- Recount the text in their own words
- Identify the main idea, topic or purpose
- List key words or phrases
- Identify structural elements of the genre
What Is SWBST? The Handy Acronym Explained
Using the SWBST process can help students create their summaries and serves as a great mnemonic when teaching reading comprehension. The steps in the SWBST process are:
- Somebody
- Wanted
- But
- So
- Then
Using these words, students can break down a paragraph or story into its key elements, working through the main character (somebody), the what (what they wanted), the conflict (but), what happened as a result of the conflict (the so) and wrapping up with the conclusion (then).
- Plus Plan
Comprehension Strategies – Interactive PowerPoint
An engaging 44 slide interactive PowerPoint to use in the classroom when introducing comprehension strategies.
- Plus Plan
Summarizing Nonfiction Interactive Activity
Help your students easily summarize nonfiction text with this interactive activity.
- Plus Plan
Comprehension Keys Board Game
A fun comprehension strategy board game for students to play during literacy rotations.