- [David] Hello, readers.
Today, I'll make a video about summaries.
A summary retells the
main ideas of a passage,
but in a much shorter version.
Cool, great, done, you can
learn anything. David out.
(David snort-laughs. It is charming and not gross.)
Sorry, I made a goof, see,
I summarized what was
gonna happen in this video,
right, I took the information
I was gonna tell you,
and I shortened it.
This is what the skill of summarizing is.
I just applied it to this
video instead of to a story.
When you summarize, you
have to ask yourself,
what are the most important facts?
What are the most important details?
You're a reporter, a stringer, a journal,
your job is to get in,
get the facts and get out.
It's the news in brief,
just the facts, man.
Take The Three Little Pigs, for instance.
I'll summarize it now.
(clearing throat)
Three little pigs live in
houses that they built.
One used straw, one used
wood, and the third pig,
who worked hardest of
all, built a brick house.
Along comes a big, bad wolf,
pictured here with a big, bad top hat,
and a big, bad house wrecking
hammer, I don't know,
and he successfully knocks
down the first two houses
in order to eat the pigs inside,
but they escaped to the brick house,
which the wolf is unable to knock down.
That's the important parts of the story,
and I bet I can even cut
that down a little bit.
But here's what's there.
All the important characters,
all their major decisions,
and the outcome of the story.
We have the beginning,
the middle and the end.
Now let me show you what too
little information looks like.
There were three pigs.
They build houses.
A big, bad wolf tried to get them.
Not enough.
That's not enough information,
it doesn't tell us whether
or not the wolf succeeded
or the important differences
between the three pig houses.
Not enough as far as facts go.
You know, it's gotta be specific,
and look, it's possible to live
on the opposite direction too.
Too many irrelevant facts.
So there were three pigs.
One's name is Horace,
another's name was Pansy,
and the third's name was Flustopher,
they had all been friends
since middle school,
and when the market was in a good place,
all three of them decided to go in
for plots of land right
next to each other.
Ah, right, but that's too much.
In a summary, I don't
need the whole story.
If it were the whole story,
it wouldn't be a summary.
It'll just be the whole
story all over again.
Keep it simple.
We need the events of the story
in the order they happened in.
We need the characters and we
need the problems they face,
and for a summary, that's kind of it.
You can learn anything; David out,
for real this time. Bye.
