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How To Summarize A Passage In Your Own Words

A summary in your own words isn’t a shorter version of the text. It’s proof that you understood it — and writing one is the fastest way to find out whether you did.

5 min read Reading Guides Series Beginner · TOFU
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Quick answer

To summarize a passage in your own words, close the text first, then write what you remember — the main claim, the key evidence, and any significant qualification. Don’t look back until you’ve written something. The friction of writing from memory is the technique. What you struggle to write is what you didn’t fully understand, which is more useful information than anything the passage itself could tell you.

1 What summarising in your own words actually requires

Most people think summarising means shortening. They read a passage, then write a condensed version — often lifting phrases directly from the text, rearranging the structure slightly, and calling it done. This produces a shorter text. It doesn’t produce a summary in your own words, because the words aren’t yours.

A genuine paraphrase — your own words, not the author’s — requires that you understood the argument well enough to reconstruct it independently. This is a higher bar than recognition. You can recognise an argument as familiar without being able to reconstruct it. The summary test distinguishes between the two.

In RC, this distinction matters directly. Main-idea questions, inference questions, and “what does the author argue?” questions all require reconstruction, not recognition. A reader who can summarise a passage in their own words after reading it once will answer these questions faster and more accurately than one who re-reads for every question.

2 Why the own-words constraint is the point, not a restriction

The requirement to use your own words isn’t a stylistic preference — it’s the mechanism that makes summarising useful. Forcing yourself away from the author’s language means you can’t coast on recognising familiar phrases. You have to generate the meaning from scratch, which is exactly what comprehension is.

Research

Generative summarisation — producing a summary from memory rather than copying or paraphrasing with the text open — produces significantly stronger long-term retention than re-reading, highlighting, or open-book summarising. The act of retrieval, even when imperfect, consolidates comprehension in ways that passive review cannot.

— Dunlosky et al., Psychological Science in the Public Interest, 2013

The implication for daily reading is direct: closing the text before writing anything is not a harder version of summarising. It’s the version that actually works. Summarise Without Judgment is a daily ritual built on exactly this principle — write what you understood, without evaluating whether it was “good enough.”

3 How to summarise any passage in your own words — step by step

1

Read the passage once with full attention

No highlighting, no note-taking during the read. Your single goal is to track the argument: what the author claims, what they use as evidence, and where they qualify or concede. If you notice yourself drifting, finish the sentence you’re on before going back — not mid-sentence. The first read is the only input your summary will draw from.

2

Close or cover the text completely before writing anything

This is the step most people skip. As long as the text is visible, your eye will drift back to it — and the moment you borrow a phrase, you’ve switched from summarising to copying. Cover it. The discomfort of writing without the text available is productive: it’s the retrieval effort that builds comprehension.

3

Write three sentences — claim, evidence, qualification

Sentence one: the author’s main claim, in your own words. Sentence two: the primary evidence or reason given. Sentence three: the most significant qualification, concession, or complication. Three sentences is enough. More than three usually means you’re including details rather than structure. The goal is the skeleton of the argument, not a condensed version of the full text.

4

Check against the text only after writing — not during

Once your three sentences are written, open the text and check. Did you get the main claim right, or did you drift toward a supporting detail? Did your evidence sentence match what the author actually cited? The gaps between what you wrote and what the text says are your comprehension gaps — the exact things to address in the next reading session.

4 What a good three-sentence summary looks like

Passage topic: a 350-word argument about the limits of remote work productivity research. After reading and closing the text:

Sentence one — claim: “The author argues that studies showing remote work improves productivity are methodologically flawed because they rely on self-reported data.” Sentence two — evidence: “The main evidence is a meta-analysis showing that productivity gains in remote work studies disappear when objective output measures replace self-reporting.” Sentence three — qualification: “The author acknowledges that for certain task types — deep, uninterrupted work — remote conditions do appear to offer genuine advantages.”

📌 Test yourself right now

Pick any article you read in the last 24 hours. Without re-reading it, write the three sentences: claim, evidence, qualification. How complete are they? Whatever you can’t write is what you didn’t retain — and that’s the most useful piece of information you’ll get from five minutes of practice. The Write “What I Understand Now” ritual runs this exact drill as a daily post-reading habit.

5 Mistakes that make summaries less useful

⚠ The most common mistake

Summarising details instead of structure. The most common error is writing “the author mentions a study from 2019 that found X, and also discusses Y, and gives an example of Z” — which is a list of content, not a summary of the argument. A useful summary captures what the author was trying to prove and the main thing they offered as support. The details exist to serve the argument. If your summary contains details but no claim, you’ve indexed the passage, not understood it.

Second mistake: looking back at the text mid-summary. The moment you look back, you switch from generating to recognising — and recognising is far easier than generating, which means the summary stops being a comprehension test. If you can’t remember something, leave a gap. A summary with gaps is more honest and more useful than one completed with the text open.

Third mistake: evaluating the summary before finishing it. “I’m not sure this is right” mid-sentence is the inner critic arriving too early. Write the three sentences first, then check them against the text. Stopping to evaluate while writing interrupts the retrieval process and usually produces a worse summary than one written straight through, gaps and all. Growth journaling builds the habit of writing first and evaluating second across all reading reflections — this transfers directly to summary practice.

The three-sentence summary isn’t a note. It’s a comprehension test you give yourself — and the result tells you more than any score could.

Questions readers ask

Start with short articles — 300 to 400 words — on topics you find easy to follow. After reading, close the text and write one sentence only: the author’s main claim. Not three sentences yet — just the claim. Do this for five articles before adding the evidence and qualification sentences. The claim-only version is harder than it sounds for most readers: the first attempt usually produces a topic statement rather than a genuine claim. That gap is what you’re closing in the first week.

Opinion essays and argumentative articles with a single clear claim — pieces where one person makes one case from start to finish. These produce the cleanest three-sentence summaries because the argument structure is explicit. Avoid news articles for initial practice: they front-load facts without building toward a conclusion, which makes the claim sentence hard to write. Once claim-writing on essays feels natural, move to denser non-fiction where the argument is less explicitly signposted.

Track the argument function of each paragraph as you read: claim, evidence, counter, or conclusion. You don’t need to write anything — just tag it mentally. By the time you finish the passage, you’ll already have a rough map of which sentence is the main claim and which paragraph contains the key evidence. The summary writes itself from that map. Readers who can’t summarise easily usually can’t paragraph-tag either — the two skills develop together.

The retention effect comes from the retrieval act — writing from memory — not from the summary itself. A summary written with the text open retains almost no comprehension benefit. A summary written with the text closed retains significant benefit, even when it’s imperfect. Review your summaries 24 hours later — without re-reading the article — and try to recall the argument from your three sentences alone. That second retrieval compounds the effect of the first and builds durable retention rather than session-level comprehension.

After each summary, check your claim sentence against the passage: did you capture the main argument, or a supporting detail? Score it simply — main claim (yes/no). Track this score across 20 sessions. Most readers start at 50–60% and reach 85–90% within four weeks of daily practice. The evidence and qualification sentences improve more slowly and are worth tracking separately only once the claim sentence is consistently accurate. Accuracy of the claim sentence is the primary metric; the other two are secondary.

Practice summarising on passages that reward it

Readlite’s article reads are built from argumentative non-fiction across 60+ subjects — each one with a clear claim worth summarising and comprehension questions that test whether you got it right.

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