Summary of Allyn & Bacon Handbook, pp. 532-52 (Using Sources,
Chap. 35)
- General
Types of Sources:
- Authoritative opinion.
Be sure you BRIEFLY indicate the credentials of the expert.
- Facts. Statistics and
other facts which can be accurately and reliably confirmed by
measurement, scientific method, or some other well-established procedure.
- Examples. This includes
case studies, anecdotes and ethnographic studies.
- Two
categories of information:
- Primary: drawn from
people who were directly involved in an event or phenomenon, a literary
work being analyzed, a first-time study of some phenomenon (letters,
diaries, autobiographies, historical records, works of literature).
- Secondary: written by those
who have only indirect knowledge of some phenomenon and who rely on
primary sources for their information (biographies, textbooks, literary
criticism, histories, etc.)
- What is a bibliography, a Works Cited page, and in-text citation?
A bibliography is a general list of sources on a
given subject. Those sources may or may not have been actually cited in the
paper.
A Works Cited page lists all sources which have
contributed quotes, ideas, information, etc. to your paper. In other words, as
the title suggests, it is a list of the sources you’ve used and cited.
An in-text citation is a parenthetical reference
which allows the reader to find the full reference in the Works Cited page and,
if they want, track it down to the original cited text.
- Taking
Notes
- Record all the
relevant bibliographic info: author, title, journal title if appropriate,
date of publication, publisher, place of publication, volume number, inclusive page numbers.
- Paraphrase, summarize
or directly quote, depending on how relevant or persuasive you think the
material is. Consider typing this directly into a computer, since you can
cut and paste it in later and save yourself one transcription step.
- Evaluate the material
and/or note how you could use it in brackets, bold, italic, color, any way you can think of to distinguish your words
from those of the author.
- Using
Quotes
- Avoid overquoting. Rule of thumb: two quotes max per page;
no more than 200 words from long (block) quotes) in 10 page paper.
- Block quotations are
indented ten spaces from left, run more than 4 lines, and require no
quotation marks.
- SUMMARIZE to condense
lengthy information essential to your argument
- PARAPHRASE to quickly
clarify complicated ideas or language
- QUOTE when the quote is
very persuasive or memorable, or when you want to convincingly buttress
your claim.
- Integrating
material smoothly into your own prose
- Introduce the material
with an attributive phrase that identifies the speaker and indicates
his/her credentials. (According to Prof. Lynn Z.
Bloom, a composition expert at the University of Connecticut, the average
American sentence is 26 words.)
- Split the quotation
and use one of the common attibutive verbs
listed at the bottom of this page. ("While conventional wisdom
suggests that an average sentence is very short," claims University
of Connecticut composition specialist Prof. Lynn Z. Bloom, "research
indicates that the average American sentence is 26 words long" (23). )
- Mix paraphrase and
quotation. (The average American sentence, according to Bloom, is 26
words, contrary to "convention wisdom [which] suggests that an
average sentence is very short" (23).)
- Blend block quotes smoothly
into your own prose, too. (But according to Prof. Lynn Z. Bloom of the
University of Connecticut, common perception
suggests
that an average sentence is very short, [but] research indicates that the
average American sentence is 26 words long. A study of 56 professional American
writers, including novelists, journalists, academicians, screenwriters, and
others, discovered that sentence length could easily vary from a single word to
over a hundred and twenty words, that sentence types and syntax also varied
widely in any given passage, and that writers felt such variety in length and
structure contributed to the flow and readibility of
their prose (23-24).
You can also use colons to
introduce quotations or block quotes.
- Avoiding
plagiarism
- Plagiarism means you
pass off others' thoughts, information, and words as your own, without
proper credit.
- Blatant plagiarism
means you've taken another's words word-for-word (verbatim) without an
in-text citation AND without quotation marks.
- Unintentional
plagiarism means that you are paraphrasing or copying too closely from
someone else's material, even if you do provide in-text credit to that
other source. The words, sentence structure, and order of ideas/facts
should be your own.
- Patchwriting
means that you're cutting and pasting material, usually gleaned from the
Internet, into your paper without reconceiving
it in your own words and within the context of your own argument. It's
not only wrong, it will also result in a very
uneven, haphazard, and inferior paper.
- Verbs
you can use to attribute sources:
adds
|
agrees
|
argues
|
asks
|
asserts
|
believes
|
claims
|
comments
|
compares
|
concedes
|
concludes
|
condemns
|
considers
|
contends
|
declares
|
defends
|
denies
|
derides
|
disagrees
|
disputes
|
emphasizes
|
explains
|
finds
|
holds
|
illustrates
|
implies
|
insists
|
maintains
|
notes
|
observes
|
points out
|
rejects
|
relates
|
reports
|
responds
|
reveals
|
says
|
sees
|
shows
|
speculates
|
states
|
stresses
|
suggests
|
thinks
|
warns
|
writes
|
|
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