Write a SUMMARY of the article, “Necessary Edges: Arts, Empathy, and Education.” (For those of you who have a copy of The Concise St. Martin’s Guide to Writing, you will find information about summary composition in Chapter 5. The chart on pg. 143 of that book explains that a summary’s purpose is to “analyze the source’s main ideas”.) Most specifically, a summary presents an understanding of the writer’s thesis, or core position, and further identifies the major points the writer includes in the paper as support for the thesis. It is important that in your summary you try to remain objective; your purpose in this writing is to demonstrate comprehension of the source you have read (but don’t worry, in a later assignment, you’ll get to present your opinion about it). Your summary should be no fewer than 8 sentences, and no more than 12 sentences. 3. Reread the summary you have written. Make sure that every sentence is clearly written and that the writing is free of avoidable errors such as spelling errors and sentence-level errors like run-ons, comma splices, and fragments. Once you have finished rereading your work, highlight the sentence in your summary paragraph that best articulate’s Yo-Yo Ma’s thesis in “Necessary Edges . . . “. Tip: Because you are writing a summary of someone else’s article, the statement you compose that contains that writer’s thesis idea should also include the author’s name and the title of the article. 4. Create a Works Cited entry for the Yo-Yo Ma article. To help you out, I’ll let you know the article appears in a textbook edited by Barclay Barrios. The textbook is called Emerging: Contemporary Readings for Writers, 4th edition, and was published by Bedford St. Martins press in 2019. Remember that the author of the article and the editor of the book are not the same person. You should cite the Yo-Yo Ma article as a work in an anthology. Directions for how to do this can be found on the Purdue OWL, here: https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/research_and_citation/mla_style/mla_formatting_and_style_guide/mla_works_cited_page_books.html