GIST Summary

GIST Summary

Activity Overview

Students summarize a text passage in exactly 20 words, forcing careful selection of the most essential information.

Grade Levels

4th Grade5th Grade6th Grade7th Grade8th Grade9th Grade10th Grade11th Grade12th Grade

Subject Areas

ScienceEnglishHistoryForeign Language

Activity Types

IndividualWritingAnalytical

Detailed Example

Summarizing Science Articles (Science - 6th Grade)

Materials Needed

  • Short informational text (1-2 paragraphs)
  • GIST template with 20 word boxes
  • Sample GIST summaries for modeling

Preparation

Select text that can be meaningfully summarized. Create templates with exactly 20 boxes for words. Prepare exemplar and non-exemplar GISTs for comparison.

Step-by-Step Instructions

1.

Explain GIST: 'Generating Interactions between Schemata and Text' - fancy name for a specific summary format.

2.

The rule: Summarize the passage in EXACTLY 20 words. Not 19, not 21. Exactly 20.

3.

Read the science article together about animal adaptations.

4.

Model the process: First, identify the main idea. Then draft a summary. Count words. Revise to hit exactly 20.

5.

Think aloud: 'I have 23 words. What can I combine? What's not essential? Can I find a more precise word?'

6.

Show how the 20-word constraint forces you to keep only the most important information.

7.

Students work independently on a new paragraph.

8.

Write summary, count, revise, count again, revise until exactly 20.

9.

Partner share: Read GISTs aloud. Do they capture the same main idea? Different details?

10.

Post several GISTs. Discuss: All 20 words, but different summaries. What does this tell us about summarizing?

Differentiation Strategies

Start with 10-word GISTs for younger students, then build to 20. Allow ELLs to draft in native language first. Challenge advanced students with progressively shorter constraints (20, then 15, then 10).

Assessment Guidelines

Check that summaries capture main idea, not just details. Verify exactly 20 words used. Look for precise word choice. Compare student GISTs to identify different interpretations.

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