Study Guide Annotated Sample 1 Summary

  • June 2020
  • PDF

This document was uploaded by user and they confirmed that they have the permission to share it. If you are author or own the copyright of this book, please report to us by using this DMCA report form. Report DMCA


Overview

Download & View Study Guide Annotated Sample 1 Summary as PDF for free.

More details

  • Words: 721
  • Pages: 2
Annotated Sample 1 Writing One-sentence Summaries (with identification of sources) Good Sample Instruction: Read the following paragraph and write a one-sentence summary within 35 words that best summarizes its main idea and the most important points in your own words (with identification of the source of the paragraph).

It’s fun to travel to another country on a vacation. However, falling ill on a journey may spoil your whole vacation. To avoid this, you should select your meals carefully. All raw food is subject to contamination. Particularly in areas where hygiene and sanitation are inadequate, you should avoid salads, uncooked vegetables, and dairy products such as cheese. Eat only food that has been cooked and is still hot, or fruit you’ve peeled yourself. Undercooked and raw meat, fish, and shellfish may carry various intestinal pathogens. Cooked food that has been allowed to stand lukewarm for several hours may provide a fertile place for bacterial growth and should be thoroughly reheated before serving. Street food vendors have been associated with increased risk of tummy trouble, so stay away from them. Follow these tips and you should be able to enjoy your journey all the way. - Trisha Macnair “Food on a Journey”, BBC Health, September 2006 Good In “Food on a Journey” (BBC Health, September 2006), Trisha Macnair offers hints to avoid illness while travelling by eating only cooked or thoroughly reheated food and fresh fruit peeled by travellers themselves. Comments Identification

-

Content Paraphrasing Skills

-

The author’s name in a correct format, i.e. the full name “Trisha Macnair” is given; only the last name “Macnair” also acceptable Punctuation appropriate: the title of the article in quotation marks, publication information put in parentheses, and the title of the publication underlined Hints to avoid illness while travelling No redundant details Most key words substituted with synonyms Key ideas presented clearly in a new sentence structure Excellent choice of words Correct tense (present tense: “Macnair offers…”)

CC 204 0 E ng lis h for Acad e mic S t udie s ( He al th C are) – S tudy G uide

Annotated Sample 1 Writing One-sentence Summaries (with identification of sources) Poor Sample Instruction: Read the following paragraph and write a one-sentence summary within 35 words that best summarizes its main idea and the most important points in your own words (with identification of the source of the paragraph).

It’s fun to travel to another country on a vacation. However, falling ill on a journey may spoil your whole vacation. To avoid this, you should select your meals carefully. All raw food is subject to contamination. Particularly in areas where hygiene and sanitation are inadequate, you should avoid salads, uncooked vegetables, and dairy products such as cheese. Eat only food that has been cooked and is still hot, or fruit you’ve peeled yourself. Undercooked and raw meat, fish, and shellfish may carry various intestinal pathogens. Cooked food that has been allowed to stand lukewarm for several hours may provide a fertile place for bacterial growth and should be thoroughly reheated before serving. Street food vendors have been associated with increased risk of tummy trouble, so stay away from them. Follow these tips and you should be able to enjoy your journey all the way. - Trisha Macnair “Food on a Journey”, BBC Health, September 2006 Poor In “Food on a Journey”, BBC Health, by Trisha, the writer said it is fun to travel to another country on a vacation if we avoid uncooked and raw street food. Comments Identification

-

Content

-

Paraphrasing Skills

-

The author’s name in a wrong format, i.e. only the first name “Trisha” given Redundant reference to the writer (“Trisha” and “the writer”) Punctuation inappropriate: publication information not in parentheses, the title of the publication not underlined, the date missing The main idea, i.e. to avoid illness while travelling, not correctly captured. Some main points either fused together (e.g. uncooked and raw street food) or missing (e.g. reheated food and fresh fruit peeled by travellers themselves) Key words not substituted with synonyms Words mostly copied from the original passage Some key ideas altered in meaning Wrong tense (past tense: “the writer said…”)

CC 204 0 E ng lis h for Acad e mic S t udie s ( He al th C are) – S tudy G uide

Related Documents