6 Evidence-Based Strategies to Target Summarizing in Speech Therapy
Episode 2429th December 2025 • The SLP Now Podcast • SLP Now
00:00:00 00:05:23

Share Episode

Transcripts

Let's chat about some strategies that we can use when targeting summarizing in our therapy sessions. This first strategy will be no surprise if you've been listening to the previous episodes, but we want to make sure that we're explicitly teaching what summarizing is. Students need clear instruction on what a summary is, what a main idea is.

A lot of times when I ask students, what's the main idea? They'll say the first sentence in the paragraph. Although that sometimes works, that won't necessarily work all the time and really helps students generate effective summaries.

So we wanna make sure that we're on the same page, that they have student friendly definitions of a summary, a main idea, and key details, and then also giving them an overall visual. In my Summarizing Skill Pack, I like to use an umbrella to help them understand what the main idea is and how the key details fit into that.

A combination of student friendly definitions and visuals to help that explicit instruction.

Then the second strategy is to use a graphic organizer. So I have a couple graphic organizers that I like to use. One of them is your traditional main idea at the top, the key details underneath the main idea.

And then I also have a graphic organizer that has sentence frames built into it to help students understand how to verbalize the summary. It helps it flow into an actual verbal summary. Once we have those pieces, we have our visuals, our student friendly definitions, we have the graphic organizer. Then I like to model my thought process and do some meta linguistic talk as I am summarizing. We may use a simple text or a picture to make that easier to understand in the beginning.

What I do is I read through a simple text and I ask myself basic questions about the text to help myself identify the main idea and the key details and maybe exclude details that aren't key details. In the Summarizing Skill Pack, we have beautiful photos with potential main ideas and key details. And we also have really simple passages. And we have multiple choice options that you can use to help students build those summaries. It's a fun way to scaffold that skill and it makes it possible for me to model my thought process. We have a number of photo scenes as well as written passages. I can model the first one, then we can do one together, and then I can gradually hand it over to them and let them model that process.

That is some very structured practice. Modeling that meta linguistic talk, and gradually releasing that. Leveraging pictures before text, just so that they can wrap their heads around the process.

I already alluded to this a little bit, but the fifth strategy is to use sentence frames. We have some graphic organizers built into the skill pack that have those sentence frames to help students produce those summaries verbally. We first identify the main idea and the details, and then we're able to produce a summary, which helps us in

generalizing the skill into functional contexts.

Our sixth strategy is to also teach text structure and help students identify them. We might need a slightly different graphic organizer or slightly different sentence frames to help them generate summaries effectively. Those are our six strategies for today. Explicitly teaching the skill, modeling and gradually giving students more autonomy, leveraging graphic organizers, starting with pictures and then moving to text, using sentence frames, and including a variety of text structures and teaching those explicitly So those are our strategies for today. If you want to access any of the materials that I mentioned today, head to slpnow.com. You can sign up for a free trial and get five free downloads, no strings attached. If you're already a member, search for the summarizing materials. You'll find the skill pack as well as summarizing activities for all of our nonfiction texts.

I'll also link the show notes for more detailed research citations and more written detail on these strategies if you want to reference that. That is a wrap and we'll see you real soon.

Chapters

Video

More from YouTube