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For my students in WRC 1013 at UTSA
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Synthesizing Sources
Based on a web-shared PowerPoint by Alisa Cooper, Faculty Director, Center for Teaching, Learning & Engagement at Glendale Community College
Mask for sale on E-Bay
Your research on a topic will lead you to consult
several sources, and you will need to present the information you find in a way that combines, or
synthesizes, those sources.
Synthesizing
Halloween Shopping on Google
Strategies for Synthesizing
• There are several strategies for synthesizing multiple sources.
• The easiest is a Summary Report which consists of two steps:– Writing separate summaries or
paraphrases of the individual sources and then…
– Linking them with transitional passages.
• This is a resource for writing a paper not the structure; that would make it predictable and boring.
Writing a Summary Report
• A simple strategy for your report is to summarize these sources individually and then to present the three summaries, linked with connecting comments.
• You want your report to have unity.
• For your report to be unified, you will need to discover a theme that relates to all three sources.
Writing an Objective Report on Sources
• Writing an objective report on sources is the second strategy for synthesizing.
• A report on sources refers specifically to these sources by name.
• It says, in effect, “Source A says theis; Source B says this; Source C says this…”
• A report on sources can be subjective (presenting your own analysis and opinions of them).
My notes: (summaries, paraphrases and quotes I can use for my paper)
In-text and bibliographical citations
Source A:
Lev Grossman
“Everybody associated with the productions — Portman, McTeigue, Weaving, Silver — forcefully, insistently stresses that V is an ambiguous, ambivalent figure. They express their hope that the movie will spark debates about the definition of terrorism”
Grossman finds the idea of a heroic terrorist “repugnant”, but concedes that the question of justified violence has never been answered.
Grossman, Lev. “The Man in the Mad Mask”, NYT online
Sunday, Mar. 12, 2006
Source B
Carretero-Gonzalez, Margarita.
“The film establishes a dialogical relationship, in an attempt to reflect any period in which individual freedom has been completely abolished in the name of –allegedly- public good.”
Carretero-Gonzalez compares the Novel to a variety of works such as The Count of Monte Cristo, Beauty and the Beast, and 1984 to demonstrate it’s place among works that open a dialogue for readers about the loss of freedom in the name of safety, the question of justified violence., and that speak to whatever “Frankenstein monster” that era produces.
Carretero-Gonzalez, Margarita. Promoting and Producing Evil. Ed. Nancy Billias.
Amsterdam & New York: Rodopi, 2010: 207-218
What my sources agree on
Dialogical: As in a
conversation where all
participants listen, pay
attention and respond to
the others’ arguments.
Ambiguous, ambivalent figure: good and evil. confusing to us because you sort of like him but are scared by him and freaked out because of the violence at the same time.
My Way,
but much
neater
Kinetic Learners like to lay things out and look at them
Carretero-GonzalezCarretero-Gonzalez, Margarita. Promoting and
Producing Evil. Ed. Nancy Billias. Amsterdam & New York: Rodopi, 2010: 207-218
“The film establishes a dialogical relationship, in an attempt to reflect any period in which individual freedom has been completely abolished in the name of –allegedly- public good.”
Many need to make it into a story
“Frankenstein’s monster turned political…”
He can’t control it and it wreaks havoc on the
villagers.
Dr. F makes a monster out of human parts
FascismCommunism MilitarismAuthoritarianismMass Movements…ismisms
…meanwhile, back at the…
bombings!?
Since V fights against injustice is his violence justified?
Or does he enjoy it too much?
http://notthebeastmaster.typepad.com/weblog/2005/11/v_and_terror.html
So is there a difference?
Acknowledging Sources
• Whenever you compose a summary report or an other type of writing that relies on sources, you create something new for others to read.
• Although what you produce may seem less than earth-shaking in significance, you are nevertheless adding , in however small a way, to the sum of the world’s knowledge.
• You are making a contribution to the domain of scholarship.
The Obligation of Scholarship
• One of the principal benefits of being a scholar is that you are entitled to read and to use the scholarship of others.
• Presenting your research and ideas for others to use is in fact one of the obligations of scholarship.
• Another of your obligations as a scholar is to acknowledge your sources.
Acknowledging Sources
• In the Summary Report, the writer uses parenthetical notes and a list of works cited to identify sources of information.
• In the Objective Report on sources, the writer makes it clear that the ideas and opinions being presented have been expressed by others.
• You would do the same with a subjective report on sources.
Importance of Acknowledging Sources
• Credit must be given where it is due. Creators of ideas deserve to be recognized for them.
• Readers need to know where they can locate your sources so they can consult the original versions. This allows them not only to check the accuracy of your citations, but also to find additional material beyond what you have presented.
Two Ways to Acknowledge Sources:
• Besides naming them within the text itself, writers acknowledge sources in two principal ways:– One is to use notes, such as parenthetical notes or footnotes, to
credit sources of specific ideas and statements.– The second way is to append a list of works cited, which
acknowledges all the sources from which words have been quoted or from which information or ideas have been derived.
See the
Synthesis
Exercise
(next up in
the folder)
Acknowledgements
Carretero-Gonzalez, Margarita. Promoting and Producing Evil. Ed. Nancy Billias. Amsterdam & New York: Rodopi, 2010: 207-218
Grossman, Lev. “The Man in the Mad Mask”, NYT online. Sunday, Mar. 12, 2006
• Rhetoric by Alisa Cooper, “• All graphics taken from promotional materials for the
novel or movie.