List main points from the body of the composition by diagramming or outlining your thoughts on paper to organize and express the summary's shape of ideas. Write your thesis statement in the center of the paper and draw three to five lines branching off of it, then place an essential idea at the end of each line. (See References 2) Each diagram idea represents a main point to help summarize your paper. Associate each combined paragraph in the summary to relate to the thesis, and assure every paragraph makes sense by itself. Be careful not to simply repeat the introduction but sum up the thesis with different words in a restated manner that clarifies the subject and ties up any loose ends.
Avoid introducing new points and keep the summary short and simple with a reasonable ending that reflects advantageously on your argument and your claim's backup evidence. Offer another example of your argument's main idea that makes a favorable impact on the reader. Conclude the thesis illustrating your capability to proficiently plan, evaluate, validate and present the decisions of original research for an important research paper. (Reference 3) Be aware of the last impression you want the reader to have and any assumptions or consequences of your paper's final perspective.
Rethink thoroughly the explicit intention of the thesis when editing your summary's final draft, and rewrite if necessary. Compose a retrospective ending that offers the reader a thesis statement that reaches beyond the information offered, and refrains from using overused general terms and abstractions.