1 / 17

Quoting and Paraphrasing

Quoting and Paraphrasing. Integrating Sources. Use sources to support your argument (evidence) Integrate sources by quoting and paraphrasing Include in-text/parenthetical citations after every quote and paraphrase. Quotations: Overview. Quotations Use quotations sparingly

feo
Télécharger la présentation

Quoting and Paraphrasing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Quoting and Paraphrasing

  2. Integrating Sources • Use sources to support your argument (evidence) • Integrate sources by quoting and paraphrasing • Include in-text/parenthetical citations after every quote and paraphrase

  3. Quotations: Overview • Quotations • Use quotations sparingly • Use quotations to maintain the language and voice of original author • Don’t let a quote stand by itself. Always set-up or integrate the quote • Incorrect:“I am a firm believer in a woman‘s right to choose to abort, but there must be a sane limit to the ability to obtain an obscenely large number” (Anderson, 2009, p. 52). • Better: Anderson (2009) claims, “I am a firm believer in a woman‘s right to choose to abort, but there must be a sane limit to the ability to obtain an obscenely large number” (p. 52). • Provide an explanation or analysis. What does this quote mean? Why is it significant to your argument? Tie the quote back to your point.

  4. Quotations: Styles • Ways to introduce a quote: • Signal phrase: • Anderson (2009) claims, “I am a firm believer in a woman‘s right to choose to abort, but there must be a sane limit to the ability to obtain an obscenely large number” (p. 52). • Colon: The first part of the colon is in your own words; the second part is the actual quote • Anderson (2009) supports women’s reproductive rights, but she also wants the government to limit the number of abortions a woman can have: “There must be a sane limit to the ability to obtain an obscenely large number,” she maintains (p. 52).  • Integrated/Select words: Pick the most important words and integrate them into your sentence. • Anderson (2009) supports women’s reproductive rights, but she also believes in a “sane limit” of abortions to prevent women from having“an obscenely large number”(p. 52).

  5. Quotations: Other Considerations • Use [square brackets] to: • Add contextual clarity • Original: “I returned there yesterday, 2 hours after it happened.” • With brackets: “I returned [to the crime scene] yesterday, 2 hours after [the murder] happened.” • Keep the sentence grammatically correct • Original: “I am very excited to see my family this month.” • Kelly claims she is “very excited to see [her] family this month.” • Be sure the bracketed words don’t change the meaning of the quoted material

  6. Quotations: Other Considerations • Use the ellipsis (…) to: • Omit unnecessary words from a quote • Original: “Citing sources is so much fun.” • According to your writing instructor, “Citing sources is…fun.” • Be sure the omitted words don’t change the meaning of the quoted material • Original: “The new Superman movies are not better than the originals.” • Unfair: Jacobs claims, “The new Superman movies are … better than the originals.”

  7. Quotations: Practice • By yourself or with a partner, use the source you were given to: • Practice writing each of the three quoting styles (signal phrase, colon, and integrated) • Cite the quoted material in-text (refer to APA handbook) • Citing the source in a references page (refer to APA handbook)

  8. Paraphrasing: Overview • Paraphrase: expressing an author’s arguments, findings, or ideas in your own words • Allows you to incorporate research into your own sentence • All paraphrases will be different • Paraphrase can be shorter, as long as, or longer than original text

  9. Paraphrasing • Benefits of paraphrasing: • Allows you to retain your own voice and style in your work • Helps you to understand the original text • Puts difficult terms or ideas into simple language • Allows you to synthesize material • Establishes your credibility

  10. How to Write a Paraphrase • Change words in the passage • Use synonyms; change verbs • Change sentence structure • Rearrange order of ideas presented in source text • Combine sentences • Be concise--combine multiple sentences into one • Unpack sentences • Convey in two or more sentences ideas presented in one

  11. Examples • Original: “Whatever your color, whatever your genes, you’re not a criminal until you’ve committed a crime.” • Paraphrase: Regardless of your race or genetic background, you’re not considered a criminal until you’ve broken the law (Snyder 45).

  12. Examples • Original: “Although communism and state socialism have failed to protect the environment, eco-terrorists are basically anti-business.” • Paraphrase: Eco-extremists oppose business even though communist and socialist governments have permitted environmental degradation (Moore 16).

  13. Paraphrasing: Practice • Paraphrase the quote you used or the paragraph from which you quoted

  14. Paraphrasing: Practice • Now that you can paraphrase a single text, the next step is to paraphrase by consolidating multiple texts and integrating these into paragraphs • See next slide for example

  15. Developmental students already tend to feel marginalized because of the nature and classification of developmental classes (Rose, 1995). Students are aware that the class generally isn’t for college credit and may feel ashamed or excluded from the college community, which can be a detriment to novice writers. Initiating students into college writing by invoking a sense of pride, identity, and conviction in their writing can ignite greater engagement and learning development in our writers (Brooke, 1988; Murray, 1991). The problem with basic writing courses, though, is they tend to neglect students’ exploration of self and identity and focus instead on grammar rules and sentence‐level errors.

  16. Paraphrasing: Practice • Practice consolidating sources by yourself or with a partner. • Read both texts. • Write a paragraph that incorporates information from both texts. • Include at least one paraphrase from each text. • Include at least one paraphrase that synthesizes the two texts. • Use quotes as needed – keep in mind this is a paraphrasing activity, though. • Use in-text citations as needed. Write references citations for each source. • Remember the paragraph structure we’ve been practicing: • Topic sentence (supporting reason) • Evidence (information from research) • Warrant (explanation)

  17. Paraphrase: Practice Revision • Next, find 2 additional sources on this topic. • Write 2 or more additional paragraphs. Integrate the 2 sources you found. • Use in-text citations and create references citations for each.

More Related