The document provides a daily lesson plan for teaching English for academic and professional purposes to 11th grade students. The lesson focuses on teaching students techniques for summarizing academic texts, including the 5 W's 1 H method, SAAC method, and First Then Finally method. Examples are given of applying each technique to summarize short stories. Students will then practice applying ...
explain briefly this easy technique in summarizing various academic texts called "first, then, finally" The "First Then Finally" technique helps students summarize events in chronological order. The three words represent the beginning, main action, and conclusion of a story, respectively.
This document discusses techniques for summarizing academic texts, including reducing text to its key ideas and main points. It provides examples of summarization strategies like SOMEBODY WANTED BUT SO, SAAC (State, Assign, Action, Complete), 5W's and 1H, FIRST THEN FINALLY, and GIVE ME THE GIST. Each technique is explained and an example is given to demonstrate how to apply the strategy to ...
4. First Then Finally This technique helps students summarize events in order. First: What happened first? Include the main character and main event/action. Then: What key details took place during the event/action? Finally: What were the results of the event/action? Here is an example using "Goldilocks and the Three Bears." First, Goldilocks entered the bears' home while they were gone.
Technique 4: First, Then, Finally Here is an example using "Goldilocks and the Three Bears." First, Goldilocks entered the bears' home while they were gone. Then, she ate their food, sat in their chairs, and slept in their beds. Finally, she woke up to find the bears watching her, so she jumped up and ran away.
This technique relies on six crucial question: who, what, when, where, why, and how. first/then/finally. This technique helps students summarize events in chronological order. give me the gist. This type of technique is like giving a friend the gist of a story. In other words, they want a summary - not a retelling of every detail. ...
Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like Summarizing techniques, Somebody wanted But so then, SAAC method and more. ... First then finally. technique helps students summarize events in chronological order. The three words represent the beginning, main action, and conclusion of a story, respectively: ...
Action: what the author is doing (example: tells, explains) Complete: complete the sentence or summary with keywords and important details; First, Then, Finally. The "First Then Finally" technique helps students summarize events in chronological order. The three words represent the beginning, main action, and conclusion of a story, respectively:
Example 1: Japanese Rail Tunnel Due to an increase in traffic between the various island which make up Japan, and predictions of a continuing growth in train travel, ... Technique 4: First, Then, Finally. The "First Then Finally" technique helps students summarize events in chronological order. The three words represent the beginning, ...
The document then lists 10 techniques for summarizing, including reading the work first, presenting information visually, analyzing the text, restating ideas in your own words, and paraphrasing. It provides examples of applying techniques like the SAAM method and using a "Somebody Wanted But So Then" structure.
It provides examples of each technique. Definition can be informal, formal, or extended. Explication involves further explaining a text to expand its meaning. ... The "5W's and 1H" asks who, what, when, where, why, and how to identify key details. 4) "First, Then, Finally" orders events chronologically. 5) "Give me the Gist" asks students to ...
Final Draft The "First Then Finally" Summarizing Technique: This technique helps students summarize events in chronological order. The three words represent the beginning, main action, and conclusion of a story, respectively. First: Which character is being showcased the most and being talked about the most in TNO Chapter 33.
5 Ws 1H. This technique relies on six crucial questions: who, what, when where, why, and how. These questions make it easy to identify the main character, important details, and main idea. First Then Finally. This technique helps to summarize events in chronological order First: What happened first? Include the main character and main event/action.
The document then lists 10 techniques for summarizing, including reading the work first, presenting information visually, analyzing the text, restating ideas in your own words, and paraphrasing. It provides examples of applying techniques like the SAAM method and using a "Somebody Wanted But So Then" structure.
first, then, finally. This technique helps students summarize events in chronological order. give me the gist. This type of techniques is like giving a friend the gist of a story. In other words, they want a summary - not a retelling of every detail.