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Humanities LibreTexts

2.2: Sample Student Summary/Response Essay- Stereotype Threat

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  • Gabriel Winer & Elizabeth Wadell
  • Berkeley City College & Laney College via ASCCC Open Educational Resources Initiative (OERI)

What is a summary/response essay?

In this chapter, we will be exploring how to organize an essay and create strong connection between ideas. In order to do that, we will start by looking at a sample essay. This essay is a "summary/response" essay. In a summary response essay, you explain an article or book you have read and share your ideas about it. The sample essay will also introduce the idea of stereotypes that we will be discussing in this chapter.

Responding to a reading

In order to prepare to understand the sample essay, first read this article from a textbook on gender:

Read this article and take notes about how the authors explain the ideas and whether you are convinced by their points.

Note: Since this article is from a social sciences textbook, it uses APA citation style, which includes the year that the source was published, not a page number, in the in-text citations.

Reading from a gender studies textbook: Stereotype Threat

What if just before you went into a job interview, someone told you that you were not qualified and would never get the job? Do you think this would impact your performance during the interview? This is the idea of stereotype threat. Essentially, a stereotype threat is when (1) a person is a member of the group being stereotyped, (2) in a situation in which the stereotype is relevant, and (3) the person is engaging in an activity that can be judged/evaluated (Betz, Ramsey, & Sekaquaptewa, 2014). 

The first main researcher on stereotype threat was Claude Steele, who focused on how it impacted African American university students. He began to notice racial minorities and women sometimes performed lower than their abilities. He hypothesized that simply knowing about a stereotype (e.g., women aren’t as good at math, racial minorities are not high achieving, etc.) could hinder performance. In groundbreaking research, he revealed his hypothesis to be true (Steele & Aronson, 1995). In this study, Steel and Aronson (1995) conducted a series of tests in which they manipulated the presence of a stereotype threat, the context of testing, etc. For example, they had groups of Black and White college students take the GRE, a test for graduate admissions. In one condition, the participants were told it would be measure their intellectual capacities while other participants were told the test was simply a problem-solving task that did not directly relate to intellectual ability. When students were told that it measured intelligence, Black participants tended to be more aware of stereotypes, have increased concerns about their ability, show reluctance to have their racial identity somehow linked to performance, and even begin to make excuses for their performance. However, Black students who were not reminded of negative stereotypes, they did much better. Thus, this study provided significant support for stereotype threat (Steele & Aronson, 1995).

In other words, simply knowing that others had a negative stereotype about them made students perform less well (Betz, Ramsey, & Sekaquaptewa, 2014). Spencer, Steele and Quinn (1999) expanded this research from racial minorities to women, particularly as it relates to math performance. Similar to Steele and Aronson’s 1995 study, Spencer, Steele, and Quinn (1995) conducted several studies to measure stereotype threat. For example, in one of the studies, students took a GRE math test. In one condition, participants were told that gender differences had been found in the test whereas in the other condition, participants were told that there had not been a gender difference found in the test. The overall results of the study showed that when women experienced stereotype threat, their test scores were lower (Spencer, Steele, & Quinn, 1999).

Just because people are affected by stereotype threat, it does not mean that they believe the stereotype about their group or about their own abilities. Not believing the stereotype, but being aware that others believe it, is enough to create a stereotype threat outcome (Huguet & Regner, 2007; Wheeler & Petty, 2001).

As you may have gathered from the description of Spencer, Steele, and Quinn’s 1999 study, girls frequently experience stereotyped threats in school. It appears that around ages 7 to 8, both girls and boys become aware of the stereotype that girls are worse at math (Galdi, Cadinu, & Tomasetto, 2014). Research has shown that females preform worse in math when under stereotype threat, but perform equivalently to males when the threat is removed. Stereotype threats have been shown to reduce test performance, but these threats can also impact a female’s ability to incorporate and receive helpful feedback if they are overly focused on whether they are confirming negative stereotypes. For example, if a woman is overly worried about behavior or performing in such a way so as not to confirm a negative stereotype (e.g., women are bad in math), the student may not teacher feedback as a useful chance to learn. When overly worried about confirming negative stereotypes, individuals may also pull away and avoid class discussions at school, etc. (Betz, Ramsey, & Sekaquaptewa, 2014).

But why does the stereotype threat impact test performance? There are various theories, but one of the most commonly accepted is that by Toni Schmader. Schmader theorized that when one is overly worried about a stereotype threat (e.g., reminded that because she is a woman, she is likely to do poorly on the math test she is about to take), the worry distracts her attention from the test. As a result, she is unable to fully focus on the activity leading to lower performance.

However, some have argued against the actual validity of the idea of stereotype threats. Early on, a common argument was that most of these studies were conducted in labs and not natural settings, and thus, could not be generalized. Some researchers, such as Paul Sackett, believed that there would be a small effect in a natural setting. This began to spark an interest in conducting more natural setting studies. Naturalistic research has confirmed that stereotype threats indeed have negative impacts on academic experiences, performance, and career goals. Moreover, these negative impacts are accumulating.

With planning, educators can reduce the impacts of stereotype threats. For example, educators can be careful not to frame tests as measures of ability. Even more importantly, they should make sure that their classrooms do not trigger stereotypes by showing the accomplishments of only certain groups. Lastly, teaching students about stereotype thread can help the students to resist it.

Reading: Student essay on Stereotype Threat

Now let's look at one reader's essay responding to this article:

Did you know that what others assume about you can affect how well you perform on a test? This is just one of the findings reported by Kristy McRaney and her colleagues in “Stereotype Threat,” a chapter in the textbook The Psychology of Gender. In this chapter, McRaney and her colleagues discuss a number of studies that examine the phenomenon known as stereotype threat: a situation in which someone is stereotyped, is aware of the stereotype, and is taking part in an activity related to the stereotype (par. 1). According to research reported by McRaney et al., “Being aware that others believe [the stereotype], is enough to create a stereotype threat outcome” of poorer performance (par. 5). McRaney and her colleagues also look at research exploring why stereotype threat impacts test performance, including the commonly-accepted theory by Toni Schmader that preoccupation with a stereotype threat means that the test-taker “ties up valuable cognitive resources” which “impacts the capacity that one has to draw on their memory and to attend and focus on the task before them” (par. 8). Finally, their article acknowledges and responds to criticism of the idea of stereotype threat (McRaney et al. par 9). Overall, McRaney and her colleagues make an understandable and compelling argument for the existence of stereotype threat; the information they present is engaging, seems balanced, and helped me make sense of my own experiences.

While McRaney and her colleagues draw on many academic studies, they still manage to present the information in a way that is both interesting and understandable to readers without a specialized academic background. For example, they begin the chapter with a series of personal questions for readers to think about as a way to prepare them for the content (McRaney et al. par 1). They also use a fairly conversational tone throughout, which gives readers a sense that the authors are talking to them directly. One example of this is the use of second person, which can be seen in the following sentence: “As you may have gathered from the description of Spencer, Steele, and Quinn’s 1999 study, girls frequently experience stereotyped threats in school” (McRaney et al. par. 5). Another way the authors make the reading accessible is by paraphrasing and summarizing the studies they cite rather than directly quoting what would likely be information presented in a vocabulary specialized to the discipline of social science. In fact, while the authors cite many studies to illustrate the phenomenon of stereotype threat, there are no direct quotations used in the chapter at all.

The authors also address counterarguments and criticism of the research they present, which makes them seem balanced and increases the credibility of their ideas. For example, one early criticism of the idea of stereotype threat they cite has to do with the conditions of these studies. Critics pointed out “that most of these studies were conducted in labs and not natural settings, and thus, could not be generalized” (McRaney et al. par 9). McRaney and her colleagues report that in response to this critique, more naturalistic research was conducted which, in fact, confirmed earlier lab-based studies (par. 9). By including these criticisms, the authors provide a rounded view of the phenomenon of stereotype threat and strengthen the argument that stereotype threat not only exists but is detrimental to stereotyped groups.

Finally, in reading the chapter, I realized that stereotype threat has had an impact on me personally. At the beginning of the chapter, McRaney and her colleagues write that “[stereotype] threats can also impact a female’s ability to incorporate and receive helpful feedback if they are overly focused and worried about providing confirmation of negative stereotypes” (par. 5). When I was in high school, this was true in my freshman math class. My class was made up of mostly male students. I didn’t ask questions in class because I didn’t want the other students to think I was bad at math. Ironically, not asking questions led me to perform worse on my tests, and I never excelled in the subject in school. I never attributed my poor performance to stereotype threat before reading the chapter; I just thought I was bad at math. But I understand now that the dynamics described in the definition of stereotype were all present in my class.

In “Stereotype Threat,” McRaney and her colleagues clearly and evenhandedly explain the phenomenon of stereotype threat. Their choice of language makes the chapter interesting and accessible to students who may not have training in the social sciences, even as the authors cite many academic sources. The authors also spend time addressing and responding to some common criticisms of and doubts about the existence of stereotype threat, which makes the ideas they discuss more credible. Furthermore, the content is relatable: the examples provided in the text helped me identify an instance of stereotype threat in my own life and made me think about other situations where stereotype threat may have been at play. Their chapter highlights an important phenomenon and, with this knowledge, institutions and individuals can take steps to create environments in and out of the classroom that lessen the chance stereotype threat will negatively (and needlessly) affect performance.

Licenses and Attributions

Cc licensed content: original.

Authored by Clara Zimmerman, Porterville College. License: CC BY NC.

CC Licensed Content: Previously Published

Reading on Stereotype Threat is adapted from " Gender Through a Cognitive Psychology Lens ", a chapter from The Psychology of Gender by Kristy McRaney, Alexis Bridley, and Lee Daffin. License: CC BY NC SA.

Want to create or adapt books like this? Learn more about how Pressbooks supports open publishing practices.

Summary/Response Essays: Overview

A summary/response essay may, at first, seem like a simplistic exercise for a college course. But the truth is that most academic writing requires us to successfully accomplish at least two tasks: summarizing what others have said and presenting what you have to say. Because of this, summarizing and responding are core skills that every writer should possess.

Being able to write an effective summary helps us make sense of what others have to say about a topic and how they choose to say it. As writers, we all need to make an effort to recognize, understand, and consider various perspectives about different issues. One way to do this is to accurately summarize what someone else has written, but accomplishing this requires us to first be active and engaged readers.

Along with the other methods covered in the Reading Critically chapter , writing a good summary requires taking good notes about the text. Your notes should include factual information from the text, but your notes might also capture your reactions to the text—these reactions can help you build a thoughtful and in-depth response.

Responding to a text is a crucial part of entering into an academic conversation. An effective summary proves you understand the text; your response allows you to draw on your own experiences and prior knowledge so that you can talk back to the text.

As you read, make notes, and summarize a text, you’ll undoubtedly have immediate reactions. Perhaps you agree with almost everything or find yourself frustrated by what the author writes. Taking those reactions and putting them into a piece of academic writing can be challenging because our personal reactions are based on our history, culture, opinions, and prior knowledge of the topic. However, an academic audience will expect you to have good reasons for the ways you have responded to a text, so it’s your responsibility to critically reflect on how you have reacted and why.

The ability to recognize and distinguish between types of ideas is key to successful critical reading.

Types of Ideas You Will Encounter When Reading a Text

  • Fact: an observable, verifiable idea or phenomenon
  • Opinion: a judgment based on fact
  • Belief: a conviction or judgment based on culture or values
  • Prejudice: an opinion (judgment) based on logical fallacies or on incorrect, insufficient information

After you have encountered these types of ideas when reading a text, your next job will be to consider how to respond to what you’ve read.

Four Ways to Respond to a Text

  • Reflection. Did the author teach you something new? Perhaps they made you look at something familiar in a different way.
  • Agreement. Did the author write a convincing argument? Were their claims solid, and supported by credible evidence?
  • Disagreement. Do you have personal experiences, opinions, or knowledge that lead you to different conclusions than the author? Do your opinions about the same facts differ?
  • Note Omissions. If you have experience with or prior knowledge on the topic, you may be able to identify important points that the author failed to include or fully address.

You might also analyze how the author has organized the text and what the author’s purposes might be, topics covered in the Reading Critically chapter .

Key Features

A brief summary of the text.

Include Publication Information. An effective summary includes the author’s name, the text’s title, the place of publication, and the date of publication—usually in the opening lines.

Identify Main Idea and Supporting Ideas. The main idea includes both the topic of the text and the author’s argument, claim, or perspective. Supporting ideas help the author demonstrate why their argument or claim is true. Supporting ideas may also help the audience understand the topic better, or they may be used to persuade the audience to agree with the author’s viewpoints.

Make Connections Between Ideas. Remember that a summary is not a bullet-point list of the ideas in a text. In order to give your audience a complete idea of what the author intended to say, you need to explain how ideas in the text are related to one another. Consider using transition phrases.

Be Objective and Accurate. Along with being concise, a summary should be a description of a text, not an evaluation. While you may have strong feelings about what the author wrote, your goal in a summary is to objectively capture what was written. Additionally, a summary needs to accurately represent the ideas, opinions, facts, and judgments presented in a text. Don’t misrepresent or manipulate the author’s words.

Do Not Include Quotes. Summaries are short. The purpose of a summary is for you to describe a text in your own words . For this reason, you should focus on paraphrasing rather than including direct quotes from the text in your summary.

Thoughtful and Respectful Response to the Text

Consider Your Reactions. Your response will be built on your reactions to the text, so you need to carefully consider what reactions you had and how you can capture those reactions in writing.

Organize Your Reactions. Dumping all of your reactions onto the page might be useful to just get your ideas out, but it won’t be useful for a reader. You need to organize your reactions. For example, you might develop sections that focus on where you agree with the author, where you disagree, how the author uses rhetoric, and so on.

Create a Conversation. Avoid the trap of writing a response that is too much about your ideas and not enough about the author’s ideas. Your response should remain engaged with the author’s ideas. Keep the conversation alive by making sure you regularly reference the author’s key points as you talk back to the text.

Be Respectful. We live in an age when it’s very easy to anonymously air our grievances online, and we’ve seen how Reddit boards, YouTube comments, and Twitter threads can quickly devolve into disrespectful, toxic spaces. In a summary/response essay, as in other academic writing, you are not required to agree with everything an author writes—but you should state your objections and reactions respectfully. Imagine the author is standing in front of you, and write your response as if you value and respect their ideas as much as you would like them to value and respect yours.

Distinguish Between an Author’s Ideas and Your Own

Signal Phrases. A summary/response essay, especially your response, will include a mix of an author’s ideas and your ideas. It’s important that you clearly distinguish which ideas in your essay are yours, which are the author’s, and even others’ ideas that the author might be citing. Signal phrases are how you accomplish this. Remember to use the author’s last name and an accurate verb.

Examples of Signal Phrases

Poor Signal Phrases: “They say…” “The article states…” “The author says…”

Effective Signal Phrases: “Smith argues…” “Baez believes…” “Henning references Chan Wong’s research about…”

Drafting Checklists

These questions should help guide you through the stages of drafting your summary/response essay.

  • Have you identified all the necessary publication information for the text that you will need for your summary?
  • Have you identified the text’s main ideas and supporting ideas?
  • What were your initial reactions to the text?
  • What new perspectives do you have on the topic covered in the text?
  • Do you ultimately agree or disagree with the author’s points? A little of both?
  • Has the author omitted any points or ideas they should have covered?
  • Has the author organized their text effectively for their purpose?
  • Have they used rhetoric effectively for their audience?
  • Have your reactions to the text changed since you first read it? Why or why not?

Writing and Revising

  • Does your summary clearly tell your reader the author’s name, the text’s title, the place of publication, and the publication data?
  • Has your summary effectively informed your reader about the text’s main ideas and supporting ideas? Have you made the connections between those ideas clear for your reader by using effective transition phrases?
  • Would your reader think your summary is objective and accurate?
  • You haven’t included any quotes in your summary, right?
  • Does your response present your reactions to the text in an organized way that will make sense to your reader?
  • Does your response create a conversation between you and the author by regularly referencing ideas from the text?
  • Would your reader think that your response is respectful of the author’s ideas, opinions, and beliefs?
  • Have you used signal phrases to help your reader recognize which ideas are the author’s and which ideas are yours?
  • Have you carefully proofread your essay to correct any grammar, mechanics, punctuation, and spelling errors?
  • Have you formatted your document appropriately and used citations when necessary?

Sources Used to Create this Chapter

Parts of this chapter were remixed from:

  • First-Year Composition by Leslie Davis and Kiley Miller, which was published under a CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.

Starting the Journey: An Intro to College Writing Copyright © by Leonard Owens III; Tim Bishop; and Scott Ortolano is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License , except where otherwise noted.

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Helping Students Summarize and Respond to Texts

Being able to accurately and effectively summarize and respond to texts is an important skill for students to develop. The following types are typically taught and practiced in our College Composition classrooms.

  • Types of Sumamries
  • Types of Response
  • Citation Information

Types of Summaries

A summary should be accurate and while 100% objectivity isn't possible, the summary writer should strive to stay as close as possible to this position. Most importantly, the summary writer should fairly represent the author's ideas. Writers of summaries should save their own ideas and interpretations for the response, rather than including these things in the summary.

The purpose for the summary can alter how it is written. Also, the reader's needs and interests must be considered when crafting a summary. A key skill to develop for use in written summary is the ability to paraphrase (to express the author's ideas using the summarizer's own words).

There are three types of summary:

Main Point Summary

A main point summary reads much like an article abstract, giving the most important "facts" of the text. It should identify the title, author, and main point or argument. When relevant, it can also include the text's source (book, essay, periodical, journal, etc.). As in all types of summary, a main point summary uses author tags, such as "In her article, Salahub states," or "Ms. Salahub argues/explains/says/asks/suggests." These tags will make it clear which ideas are those of the author and the text being summarized, not the summarizer. This type of summary might also use a quote from the text, but the quote should be representative of the text's main idea or point. A main point summary is often used when writing academic papers as a way to introduce the reader to a source and to place the main point of that source into the context of an argument or discussion of an issue.

"In his essay Dropping the Sat? which is posted on the Affirmative Action and Diversity Project's Website, George Will considers the proposal by some that schools stop using student's SAT scores when choosing which students to admit. Mr. Will explains that at most prominent schools in America, the SAT is a key factor in determining college admissions. Mr. Will argues that the SAT is an important tool in predicting the ability of prospective students to perform in college and therefore, should continue to be a factor in college admissions."

Key Point Summary

This type of summary will have all the same features as a main point summary, but also include the reasons and evidence (key points) the author uses to support the text's main idea. This type of summary would also use direct quotes of key words, phrases, or sentences from the text. This summary is used when it is necessary for the summary writer to fully explain an author's idea to the reader. The key point summary involves a full accounting and complete representation of the author's entire set of ideas. One reason to use this sort of summary would be if the writer intended to respond to the author's argument using an agree/disagree response model. In such a case, there may be some of the author's ideas that the writer agrees with, but others with which the writer disagrees.

In his essay Dropping the Sat? which is posted on the Affirmative Action and Diversity Project's Website, George Will considers the proposal by some that schools stop using student's SAT scores when choosing which students to admit. Mr. Will explains that at most prominent schools in America, the SAT is a key factor in determining college admissions. Will argues that the SAT is an important tool in predicting the ability of prospective students to perform in college and therefore, should continue to be a factor in college admissions. As part of his argument, Mr. Will discusses the origins of the SAT, considers the SAT's effect on campus diversity, challenges the validity of some of the common arguments against using the SAT test, and explains why he believes the SAT to be a necessary tool in determining college admissions. Mr. Will concludes that the SAT is still necessary because we need "some generally accepted means of making millions of annual assessments...roughly predictive of ability to perform well in particular colleges" (2).

Outline Summary

This type of summary mimics the structure of the text being summarized. It includes the main points and argument in the same order they appear in the original text. This is an especially effective technique to use when the accompanying response will be analytic, such as an evaluation of the logic or evidence used in a text.

In his essay Dropping the Sat? which is posted on the Affirmative Action and Diversity Project's Website, George Will argues for the continued use of the SAT in determining college admissions. He mentions Richard Atkinson, president of the University of California, as a specific example of those who want to stop using SAT scores in their admissions process. Part of Atkinson's reasoning is that without the SAT, his school would be better able to create a more racially and ethnically diverse campus. However, George Will argues, "something must perform the predictive function assigned to the SAT" (1). George Will goes on to discuss that the SAT was created in order to make an education at a prestigious school available not just to those who could afford it, but also to those with sufficient intellectual merit. However, he states, "[b]y purporting to measure intellectual merit, the SAT served equality of opportunity-but the result was opportunity from which not all racial and ethnic groups benefited equally" (1). Mr. Will says that while some of the original goals of the SAT have been accomplished, it is not yet time to abandon its use. He challenges the validity of some of the most common arguments against the SAT. He suggests that there is currently no better alternative to the SAT, that we can not judge students equally according to grades alone, especially when there is no national standard or curriculum. Mr. Will concludes that the SAT is still necessary because we need "some generally accepted means of making millions of annual assessments...roughly predictive of ability to perform well in particular colleges" (2)."

Types of Responses

When teaching ways of writing a response to a text, it is helpful to consider three types of response. However, keep in mind that once the writer begins to craft an actual response, it is likely that he/she will find him/herself combining elements of more than one response type, or even using elements of all three techniques. Even so, it is beneficial in the beginning to have writers separate the techniques and learn the fundamentals of each one.

Any type or combination of responses should be supported by details, examples, facts, and evidence. This support can take the form of personal experience, evidence from the primary text, or evidence from other texts. Also, the response should focus on making a single, overall main point.

Agree/Disagree Response

This form of response is not merely the writer's opinion. However a writer chooses to respond, he/she should show the reader how and why he/she responded to the text as he/she did. Also, in crafting a response, writers don't have to focus on one or the other. They might find that they disagree with some of the author's points, but agree with others. In that case, their response will be a combination of agreeing and disagreeing. Whether they agree or disagree, or some combination of both, the writer must support their response with details, examples, facts, and evidence. Again, this support can take the form of personal experience, evidence from the primary text, or evidence from other texts.

Interpretive/Reflective Response

In this type of response, writers focus on a key passage or idea from the text, explaining and/or exploring it further. They also might reflect on their own experiences, attitudes, or observations in relation to the ideas of the text. The writer might use their response to consider how the author's ideas might be interpreted by other readers, how the ideas might be applied, or how they might be misunderstood.

Analytic Response

This sort of response analyzes key elements of the text, such as the purpose, the audience, the thesis and main ideas, the argument, the organization and focus, the evidence, and the style. For example, how clear is the main idea? What sort of evidence is used to support the author's thesis and is it effective? Is the argument organized and logical? How are elements such as the author's style, tone, and voice working? This type of response looks at the essay in terms of the effectiveness of specific elements, whether they are working or not. Part of the writer's response might include suggestions for how the author could have made the essay more effective.

ESCC LRC LibGuides

ENG 111 Summary/Response Essay: Home

summary response essay sample pdf

Getting Started

A summary/response is a natural consequence of the reading and annotating process. In this type of essay, writers capture the controlling idea and the supporting details of a text and respond by agreeing or disagreeing and then explaining why.

  • Summary : Write the main ideas of the article in your own words with occasional quotes from the original author(s).
  • Response : Explain your thoughts about this article. Evaluate what you think on this issue and relate it to your own experiences or other things you have read.

The best way to write a summary is ask yourself the following questions: 

  • What issues are described, explained or resolved in this work? 
  • What is the controlling/main idea? 
  • What are the supporting details? 
  • What results or conclusions are made? 
  • What opinion does the author want readers to keep in mind about this topic? 
  • What information does the author use to convince readers? 

To move from an outline to a draft of a summary , follow these guidelines: 

State the author’s name and the title of the text you’re summarizing in the first 1-2 sentences of the summary. 

Express the author’s main idea in your own words in the first 1-2 sentences of the summary (no more than three words in a row from the text you’re summarizing.) 

Identify main points that support the main idea. Write the main points in your own words (no more than three words in a row from the text.) 

Use minor details (e.g. examples, explanations and specific details) only when needed to support the main points. 

Arrange the ideas so the organization and transition words in the summary paragraph reflect the original text. 

Show that you are summarizing someone else’s ideas with expressions like “According to” + author’s name or author’s last name + a signal verb. 

A response is a critique or evaluation of the author's essay. Unlike the summary, it is composed of YOUR opinions in relation to the article being summarized. It examines ideas that you agree or disagree with and identifies the essay’s strengths and weaknesses in reasoning and logic, in quality of supporting examples, and in organization and style. A good response is  persuasive ; therefore, it should cite facts, examples, and personal experience that either refutes or supports the article you’re responding to, depending on your stance.

Summary Response Essay Outline Patterns

Need more? Check out these links:

How to Write a Summary, Analysis and Response Essay (with examples)

Summary and Response Essay Examples

How to Write a Summary and Response Essay

summary response essay sample pdf

  • Last Updated: Feb 8, 2024 4:33 PM
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A Guide to Effective Summary Response Essays

Table of Contents

If you’ve been tasked to write a summary response essay but are unsure where to start, don’t worry. We’ve got you covered with this quick guide on the basics of summary response essays. We’ll cover everything from its definition and writing tips to a sample  outline for summary response essay .

This is a less common type of essay that requires a certain style and approach that differs from other types of essays. But with the help of this guide, you’ll be able to make the writing process much easier.

What is a Summary Response Essay

Summary response essays are two-part essays that include a summary of an article, essay, chapter or report and a response to it.

It is not a formal paper or essay because it does not have an introduction, body, or conclusion like other essays. This type of essay instead consists of a summary of the reading followed by a response to the reading.

To better understand this type of essay, it’s best to look at its two parts separately in the next section.

What to Include in Your Essay

The summary is a concise round-up of all the main ideas in an essay or writing. It cites all the relevant details about the work you’re reviewing. Your summary can include the following:

  • Author and the work’s title (typically in the first sentence).
  • The thesis of the essay and its supporting ideas
  • It may use direct quotations to provide forceful or concise statements of the author’s ideas

Most summaries present the main points in the order they were made by the author and continually referred back to the article being summarized. Your summary should not exceed one-third the length of the original work.

Responses are critiques or evaluations of an author’s work. Unlike the summary, it is composed of YOUR opinions for the article being summarized.

This examines ideas that you agree or disagree with. It identifies the work’s strengths and weaknesses by looking at its organization and style. You should use examples and evidence to support the opinions in your response.

A good response must contain

  • Personal experiences

Depending on your stance, these can either refute or support the article you’re responding to.

Steps for Writing a Summary Response Essay

Identify the main idea of the reading .

Create a topic sentence that describes the main idea of your reading for your summary. For your response, create a separate thesis statement that states your opinion on the author’s main idea.

Add supporting details for the summary and response.

Next, identify the supporting facts of the reading. In the summary paragraph, it is important to keep the order of the supporting details. Consider how these points relate to the author’s main idea.

Develop the supporting details for the response paragraph, highlighting how your evidence or personal experience supports the thesis statement you’ve created.

Identify the author’s purpose for writing.

It’s helpful to get to know the goal that the author wants to achieve through their work.

For your summary, try to ask yourself:

  • Why did the author write this?
  • Is there anything specific that the author wants me to know?
  • Does the author want me to do something after reading this? 

And in your response, discuss whether or not the author was successful in achieving the goal of their work.

Write a summary response to the reading .

Given all the data you’ve gathered from the first three steps, you can start writing your summary and the response paragraphs. Make sure to include all the necessary information and be detailed but not flowery. 

General Outline for Summary Response Essay

Summary paragraph.

  • Provide the title and author’s name to introduce the work the essay will discuss. Additionally, state the author’s main idea.
  • Write supporting sentences that describe the supporting details of the work .
  • Let this information come together in a sentence that explains the author’s reason or goal for writing the piece.

Response Paragraph

  • Clearly state your opinions or thoughts about the author’s main idea. Use the thesis statement you created in the earlier steps. You can also ask yourself: Does my opinion regarding the reading relate to the author’s main idea?
  • Put your personal experience into a supporting sentence (or sentences) describing how your opinion or thoughts support or go against the author’s main idea.
  • Write a sentence summarizing this information and explain how your opinion or thought relates to the author’s main idea.

Wrapping Up

A summary response essay typically includes a summary of the reading followed by your thoughts and reactions. It may seem like a long and daunting task, but with a little guidance, you can be confident you’re up for the challenge.

Use the writing tips and  outline for summary response essay  sample in this essay to help you easily get started!

A Guide to Effective Summary Response Essays

Abir Ghenaiet

Abir is a data analyst and researcher. Among her interests are artificial intelligence, machine learning, and natural language processing. As a humanitarian and educator, she actively supports women in tech and promotes diversity.

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Summary-Response Essays

Class Notes for Summary-Response Essay

1/23/04 -- Our Day One Brainstorming on Academic Writing

1/23/04 -- Assignment Sheet: Summary-Response Essay

1/22/04 -- Working on Developing Responses to the Readings

2/9/04 -- More Ideas for Responding to an Essay

1/15/04 -- A Critical Reading Guide

1/15/04 -- Reading Annotation Strategies

1/23/04 -- Questions for Reading and Writing

1/15/04 -- Summarizing Strategies

1/15/04 -- Summarizing a Paragraph

1/15/04 -- Summarizing an Essay

1/15/04 -- Creating a Sentence Outline for Summarizing

1/15/04 -- Informative and Descriptive Summaries

1/15/04 -- Writing a Summary

1/26/04 -- Summary vs. Paraphrase

1/26/04 -- Paraphrasing Strategies

1/26/04 -- Examples of Paraphrasing

1/26/04 -- Deciding Whether to Quote, Paraphrase, or Summarize

2/9/04 -- Introducing and Integrating Quotes (and Paraphrases and Summaries) Into Your Paper

2/9/04 -- Using Accurate Verbs for the Signal Phrases

1/26/04 -- Sample Paper #1 (Buckley Response, More Standard)

1/26/04 -- Sample Paper #2 (Etzioni Response, More Standard)

1/26/04 -- Sample Paper #3 (Etzioni Response, More Creative)

1/26/04 -- Sample Paper #4 (King Response, More Standard)

1/26/04 -- Sample Paper #5 (King Response, More Standard)

1/26/04 -- Sample Paper #6 (King Response, More Creative)

1/26/04 -- Sample Paper #7 (Zinsser Response, More Standard)

1/30/04 -- My "Scanning Notes" on the Summary-Response Rough Drafts

2/12/04 -- Quotation Problems and Solutions

1/30/04 -- More Ideas for Writing "Leads" and Introductions for Essays

2/9/04 -- Ideas for Titles, Introductions, and Conclusions from the BNCH

2/9/04 -- More Ideas for Writing Conclusions

2/9/04 -- Ideas about Writing Thesis Statements

2/12/04 -- More Sample Thesis Statements

  • Business Templates
  • Sample Essays

FREE 8+ Response Essay Samples in MS Word | PDF

One of the most common classroom activities students are all too familiar with is writing essays. May it be in an exam or just a simple seat work, let’s face it, teachers have always used this method in assessing learning. But despite its becoming a routine, many are still uncertain, if not a bit scared of writing.

Response Essay

Argumentative essay example - 9+ samples in pdf, word, persuasive essay example - 8+ samples in word, pdf, literary essay example - 9+ samples in word, pdf.

Writing is actually a great way to convey your ideas, comments, or reaction. Teachers let you write to get to know you and your opinion about a course, a topic, or a film. But if you are still worried, then our Essay Samples might make you feel better. You can download them for free, so please, take your time.

Literary Response Essay Sample

sample literary response essay 1

Size: 46 KB

Reaction Response Essay Rubric in PDF

reaction response essay pdf

Size: 35 KB

Free Personal Response Essay

personal response essay free

Size: 55 KB

Personal Essay Grading Rubric Example

response personal essay rubric example

Reader Response Essay Format

reader response essay format

Size: 50 KB

An essay is a literary composition that contains analysis or explanation on certain subject matters. You may check out our Sample College Essays  for more details. Anyway, it is an article that is composed of three parts:

1. Introduction – this is where you are going to present your topic or argument.

2. Body – this contains details that strengthen your point or topic.

3. Conclusion – this is where you clinch all of your ideas together, make up a paragraph that summarizes your entire point.

Knowing the parts of an essay cannot get you very far though. The content of your article matters more, thus you should understand that writing is a series of stages and it takes time. I have enumerated these stages to at least appease your worries.

1. The Prewriting Stage – this is the stage when you get to plan, outline, and build your ideas.

2. The Drafting Stage – this is the part when you could write your initial take on your topic.

3. The Revision Stage – reorganizing your paragraphs, establishing your voice and tone, and improving your first draft are in this stage.

4. The Editing Stage – this is when you can check any grammatical errors.

5. The Publishing Stage – this is the moment when you can finally think about submitting your work.

Since I have emphasized the importance of content in essay writing, you should also know that there are four major types of essays. These types determine how you can write about the topic you have chosen. The four types are the following:

1. Expository – this is an essay in which its purpose is to inform, thus be mindful of your facts on this one.

2. Persuasive – this is an essay that persuades or convinces the readers to accept your ideas. You are to present an argument, analyze and discuss all the sides of the point, and express your position or belief. You may check out our Analysis Essay Examples .

3. Descriptive – this is an essay that portrays scenes through images.

4. Narrative – this is an essay that tells a story. Topics of real life experiences can be written this way.

Academic Response Essay Assignment Sheet Sample

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Effective Summary Response Essay

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Response Essay Summary

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School Response Essay

Writing is not a breeze. To produce an output is not that easy. But it is still great because it is where you can express yourself without worrying about how to pronounce words or getting nervous in front of an audience.

Think about it. We would hardly know history or any of our subjects or courses without writers. And let’s not forget the stories we love when we were kids. Writing gives us a glimpse of ourselves and of the world. Well, Descriptive Essay Examples can specifically do that. So write on!

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VIDEO

  1. Summary Response Essay

  2. Unit 3: Summary & Response Essay

  3. Summary Response Essay Overview

  4. The Summary Response Essay

  5. English 1301: Summary & Response Essay

  6. Writing a Summary Response, Part I: Format and Citation

COMMENTS

  1. PDF Luc Writing Center "How to Write a Summary Response Essay"

    Ideally, the length of your response should equal that of your summary (i.e. 4 paragraphs for the response if you wrote 4 for the summary - keep within the assignment's page limits). In the first paragraph, begin as if you were writing the topic paragraph of a normal essay,

  2. PDF Writing Effective Summary and Response Essays

    Note: Some essays will incorporate both agreement and disagreement in a response, but this is not mandatory. 2. Introduce the essay with a short paragraph that includes your thesis. Then, each body paragraph summarizes one point and responds to it, and a conclusion wraps the essay up. Intro/thesis Summary point one; agree/disagree Summary point ...

  3. Summary-Response Writing Breakdown

    Identify the author (s) and the piece of writing that is being addressed. Give a brief summary that highlights the key parts, tone, arguments, or attitude. This may or may not include direct quotations. Critically evaluate the piece of writing. Depending on the task, this could include any sort of response, including but not limited to ...

  4. PDF Drafting the Summary and Response Essay

    In the Summary and Response Essay, your introduction has two parts: the introductory paragraph and the summary paragraph. Since the introduction grabs our attention, introduces the topic, and lays the ... Print off the Sample Student Essays so you have a model of each section of your essay as you write. 3. Have your From Inquiry to Academic ...

  5. Writing Effective Summary and Response Essays

    Writing Effective Summary and Response Essays. The Summary: A summary is a concise paraphrase of all the main ideas in an essay. It cites the author and the title (usually in the first sentence); it contains the essay's thesis and supporting ideas; it may use direct quotation of forceful or concise statements of the author's ideas; it will NOT usually cite the author's examples or supporting ...

  6. PDF Writing A Summary/Response

    in the essay. Make sure to explain these points in your own words. Step Four: Write a last line that sums up the article, again in your own words. ... Sample Summary/Response "Just Walk on By: A Black Man Ponders His Power to Alter Public Space" In his essay, "Just Walk on By: A Black Man Ponders His Power to Alter Public Space," ...

  7. PDF How to Write a Critical Response

    Sample: Effective Response #1. The article could have been much more convincing if the author didn't begin most of his back-up arguments with "I", it gave the article a complaining and ranting tone, when an argument is explained like "a real course creates intellectual joy, at least in some.

  8. PDF Preparing to Write the Summary and Response Essay

    Assignment Sheet" and perhaps even look over the sample student essays so that you understand the assignment guidelines before you begin thinking about how to prewrite for this essay. Once you ... thesis statement for the Summary and Response Essay. 6. After you've got a working thesis, develop main points to support your thesis. That is ...

  9. 5.7: Sample Response Essays

    Sample response paper "Typography and Identity" in PDF with margin notes. Sample response paper "Typography and Identity" accessible version with notes in parentheses. This page titled 5.7: Sample Response Essays is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Anna Mills ( ASCCC Open Educational Resources ...

  10. How to Write a Summary, Analysis, and Response Essay Paper With

    Summary Writing Steps. A summary is telling the main ideas of the article in your own words. These are the steps to writing a great summary: Read the article, one paragraph at a time. For each paragraph, underline the main idea sentence (topic sentence). If you can't underline the book, write that sentence on your computer or a piece of paper.

  11. 2.2: Sample Student Summary/Response Essay- Stereotype Threat

    This is the idea of stereotype threat. Essentially, a stereotype threat is when (1) a person is a member of the group being stereotyped, (2) in a situation in which the stereotype is relevant, and (3) the person is engaging in an activity that can be judged/evaluated (Betz, Ramsey, & Sekaquaptewa, 2014). The first main researcher on stereotype ...

  12. PDF Monnastes Summary and Response Essay

    response to that point Write the Response point by point Conclusion: End the essay by making a final statement about the essay and the author. Conclusion: End the essay by making a final statement about the essay and the author. Outline #1: Block Pattern Outline #2: Point Pattern I. Introduction (1 paragraph) II. Summary: (1 paragraph) Remember

  13. Summary/Response Essays: Overview

    Summary/Response Essays: Overview A summary/response essay may, at first, seem like a simplistic exercise for a college course. But the truth is that most academic writing requires us to successfully accomplish at least two tasks: summarizing what others have said and presenting what you have to say. Because of this, summarizing and responding ...

  14. Summary, Analysis, and Response Essay Example

    Summary, Analysis, Response Papers Include: 1. A summary of the argument. 2. An analysis of whether the argument is written effectively. 3. A personal response. No one knew at the time, but 1948 launched three men toward their destinies. John F. Kennedy in 1947.

  15. Guide: Helping Students Summarize and Respond to Texts

    A summary should be accurate and while 100% objectivity isn't possible, the summary writer should strive to stay as close as possible to this position. ... This type of response looks at the essay in terms of the effectiveness of specific elements, whether they are working or not. Part of the writer's response might include suggestions for how ...

  16. PDF Outline Template: Summary and Response Essay

    Outline Template: Summary and Response Essay I. Introduction a. Follows one of the models in Inquiry, Chapter 9 b. Narrows toward the specific topic II. Summary Paragraph a. First line includes author full name, full title of text, and gist of author's main point b. Subsequent lines more specifically overview the author's point, sub-points ...

  17. Home

    Write the Response point by point : End the essay by making a final statement about the essay and the author. End the essay by making a final statement about the essay and the author. Introduction (1 paragraph) Summary: (1 paragraph) Remember you are only summarizing (you may have fewer or more than these 4 points) Main Point 1 . Main Point 2

  18. A Guide to Effective Summary Response Essays

    A summary response essay typically includes a summary of the reading followed by your thoughts and reactions. It may seem like a long and daunting task, but with a little guidance, you can be confident you're up for the challenge. Use the writing tips and outline for summary response essay sample in this essay to help you easily get started!

  19. Summary Response Essays

    Prof. Scott R. Stankey. Summary-Response Essays. Class Notes for Summary-Response Essay. 1/23/04 -- Our Day One Brainstorming on Academic Writing. 1/23/04 -- Assignment Sheet: Summary-Response Essay. 1/22/04 -- Working on Developing Responses to the Readings. 2/9/04 -- More Ideas for Responding to an Essay. 1/15/04 -- A Critical Reading Guide.

  20. PDF Summary and Response Essay Checklist

    10. ___ The essay contains a Works Cited page which provides an MLA bibliographic entry for the essay to which you're responding and follows MLA formatting guidelines. (Note: I've provided the correct works cited entries below. For a sample Works Cited page, please reference the Sample Student Essays from Learning Unit 3).

  21. PDF Drafting the Summary and Response Essay

    Summary and Response Essay's organization. However, remember that you may wish to start drafting the body paragraphs first. Drafting the Introduction In the Summary and Response Essay your introduction has two parts: the introductory paragraph and the summary paragraph. Since the introduction grabs our attention, introduces the topic and lays the

  22. FREE 8+ Response Essay Samples in MS Word

    1. Expository - this is an essay in which its purpose is to inform, thus be mindful of your facts on this one. 2. Persuasive - this is an essay that persuades or convinces the readers to accept your ideas. You are to present an argument, analyze and discuss all the sides of the point, and express your position or belief.

  23. How to Write Your Next Summary Response Essay in Minutes

    Master summary response essays with ease! Discover top tips, AI-powered insights, and Mindgrasp's unique tools to elevate your writing skills!