Summarizing - Teacher Guide

Grade 5 English Language Arts | FL B.E.S.T. Standard: ELA.5.R.3.2

FL B.E.S.T. Standard ELA.5.R.3.2

Summarize a text to enhance comprehension. Include plot and theme for a literary text. Include the central idea and relevant key details for an informational text.

Learning Objectives

By the end of this unit, students will be able to:

Essential Vocabulary

Term Definition Student-Friendly Explanation
Summary A brief statement of the main points of a text A short version that tells the most important parts
Main Idea The central point or most important concept What the text is MOSTLY about - the big picture
Key Details Important facts or information that support the main idea The important details that help explain or prove the main idea
Theme The underlying message or lesson of a literary text The life lesson the story teaches (for fiction)
Central Idea The main point of an informational text What the author wants you to learn (for nonfiction)
Objective Based on facts, not personal feelings Sticking to what the text says, not your opinion

Summarizing Literary vs. Informational Texts

Literary Text Summary Includes: Informational Text Summary Includes:
  • Main character(s)
  • Setting (when relevant)
  • Problem/conflict
  • Key events (beginning, middle, end)
  • Resolution
  • Theme/lesson
  • Topic
  • Central idea (main point)
  • Key supporting details
  • Important facts/examples
  • Author's purpose (if relevant)

Lesson Sequence (5-Day Plan)

Day Focus Activities
1 Introduction & Main Idea Introduce what a summary is. Practice finding main idea vs. details. Use Student Concept Worksheet.
2 Summarizing Fiction Model summarizing a story using Somebody-Wanted-But-So-Then. Include theme.
3 Summarizing Nonfiction Practice finding central idea and key details. Use Practice Worksheet passages 1-2.
4 Avoiding Opinions Focus on objective summaries. Practice identifying and removing opinions. Complete Practice Worksheet.
5 Assessment Administer FAST Format Quiz. Review and reteach as needed.

Teaching Strategies

Strategy 1: Somebody-Wanted-But-So-Then (SWBST) for Fiction

Use this framework to summarize stories: Somebody (main character) Wanted (goal/motivation) But (problem/conflict) So (events/actions) Then (resolution). Add theme at the end: "This story teaches that..."

Strategy 2: 5W Summary for Nonfiction

Help students identify: Who or What is this about? What is the main point? Why is it important? How does the author support this? Keep answers brief and focused on most important information.

Strategy 3: The "Tweet Test"

Challenge students to summarize in 280 characters or less (like a tweet). This forces them to identify only the MOST essential information. Then expand to a full paragraph while keeping it concise.

Strategy 4: Delete, Substitute, Keep

Teach students to: DELETE minor details, examples, and repetition. SUBSTITUTE lists with category words (e.g., "apples, oranges, bananas" becomes "fruits"). KEEP only main ideas and essential details.

Common Misconceptions

Misconception: A summary should include every detail

Correction: A summary is SHORT - it only includes the MOST important information. If it's almost as long as the original, students are including too much. Teach them to be selective.

Misconception: I can copy sentences from the text

Correction: Summaries must be in the student's OWN WORDS (paraphrased). Copying is not summarizing - it's quoting. Paraphrasing shows true understanding of the text.

Misconception: I should include my opinion about the text

Correction: Summaries must be OBJECTIVE. Phrases like "I think," "the best part was," or "this was interesting" do NOT belong in summaries. Stick to what the author wrote.

Misconception: Retelling and summarizing are the same thing

Correction: Retelling includes many details in sequence. Summarizing is more selective - it identifies ONLY the main idea and most important supporting details. A summary is much shorter than a retelling.

Differentiation Strategies

For Struggling Learners

For Advanced Learners

FAST Test Connection

On the FAST assessment, summarizing questions typically ask students to:

Key Strategy: Teach students to eliminate answer choices that are too specific (just one detail), too broad (doesn't match the text), or include opinions. The best summary captures the main idea with key support.

Materials Checklist