Things You'll Need
Instructions
Read the newspaper article's title, subtitle and first paragraph to identify the author's main point. Underline or note the main point for future reference.
Skim through the newspaper article, reading the headings and subheadings, photograph captions, charts and graphs, insets and the final paragraph. This gives you an overview of the article's trajectory and will help you take better notes.
Read the whole article carefully, taking notes on its arguments, supporting details and conclusions. Often each section of an article or each paragraph, if it is short, will introduce a new piece of relevant information or further support a previous piece of information.
Organize your notes into an outline. Place the main idea first, in your own words, and then list supporting information in an intuitive order, such as chronologically from most to least important, or in sections that otherwise logically follow one another. If at all possible, refrain from using the author's words at all. If you must quote her, be sure to use quotation marks and note which page the quotation comes from.
Use the outline to craft your article summary. State the article's title, author and main point first, followed by the points listed in your outline. Do not simply make a list, however. Your summary should read with the ease of strong prose, using concrete nouns and verbs and clear sentences to tell the brief story of the article.