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Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting Which one to use when and how

Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting

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Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting. Which one to use when and how. Using sources. Sources support your argument It’s like having your boy in your corner in a fight Sources make you look more credible It’s your “I know what I’m talking about” card - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting

Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct QuotingWhich one to use when and how

Page 2: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting

Using sources

•Sources support your argument ▫It’s like having your boy in your corner in a

fight•Sources make you look more credible

▫It’s your “I know what I’m talking about” card

•Sources help broaden your and your reader’s understanding▫They illustrate your point better than you

could and lead you to more information you could include in your paper (and make it longer!)

Page 3: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting

How to include sources

•There are three ways you can include a source:

▫Summarize▫Paraphrase▫Direct Quote

Page 4: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting

Summary

•To summarize, you:▫Shorten a large piece of text (anything

from a paragraph to an entire book) down to just a few sentences

▫Focus on the most important aspects of the source

▫Use your own words

Page 5: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting

When to choose summarizing

•Summaries are useful when:▫The information you need to include in

your paper is just an overview of the entire source

▫The whole source is too much to include

Page 6: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting

An example of summary

•Source:▫The Australian Clown Association

manual

•Summary:▫The Australian Clown Association

manual outlines the rules of the organization, lists the members, and explains when and where clown festivals will take place (www.aca.au).

Page 7: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting

Paraphrase

•To paraphrase, you:▫Rephrase a small piece of text (one or

two sentences) in your own words ▫Focus on the idea of the sentence(s),

not the wording

Page 8: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting

When to choose paraphrasing

•Paraphrases are useful when:▫The information you need out of the

source is just one or two sentences▫You do not want to directly quote the

sentence(s)▫The idea of the sentence is more

important than the exact words of the original source

Page 9: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting

An example of paraphrasing• Source:

▫Australian Clown Association manual

• Original:▫The new clown will register his or her name

with the clown registry no less than ten days before and no sooner than forty-five days before the first official performance.

• Paraphrase▫New clowns have to register the names they

want to use ten days before they perform for the first time (www.aca.au).

Page 10: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting

Direct Quotation

•To directly quote, you:▫Place a piece of text from the original

source in quotation marks ▫Use the exact wording found in the

original source ▫Use a full sentence or two or part of a

sentence with an introduction (see example).

Page 11: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting

When to choose a direct quotation•Direct quotations are useful when:

▫The exact words that the original source is important

▫The text you want to use is short

Page 12: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting

Example of a direct quote• Source:

▫Australian Clown Association manual• Original:

▫Clowning has been a long standing tradition in Australia that captivates the hearts of millions and advances Australian culture around the world.

• Direct Quotation:▫Steve Bean, the president of the Australian

Clown Association, says that Australian clowning “captivates the hearts of millions and advances Australian culture around the world” (www.aca.au).

Page 13: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Direct Quoting

BUT!

•You can’t just spout information you found as if it was your own. ▫THAT’S STEALING! (AND WILL EARN

YOU A GREAT BIG ZERO)

•Cite, cite, cite the source!