Metadata
Title
Integrating Sources
Category
courses
UUID
0874f5e917ff438296c88b7423fe3784
Source URL
https://www.aucegypt.edu/academics/mohamed-taymour-writing-and-communication-cen...
Parent URL
https://www.aucegypt.edu/academics/mohamed-taymour-writing-and-communication-cen...
Crawl Time
2026-03-19T06:06:50+00:00
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Integrating Sources

Source: https://www.aucegypt.edu/academics/mohamed-taymour-writing-and-communication-center/writing-tips-and-resources/integrating-sources Parent: https://www.aucegypt.edu/academics/mohamed-taymour-writing-and-communication-center/writing-tips-and-resources

Sources, or information from books, articles, newspapers or other online materials are an important component of academic writing.

Once you have read and analyzed your sources, you can begin to decide which information should be included in your essay. There are three ways to bring in outside information into your work:

In each case you MUST cite the information you have used in every sentence it is used.

Using sources will allow you to:

Read your paper out loud to determine whether it is clear to your listener/reader that where what you are saying ends and where information from your sources begins (without "seeing" the quotation marks). If not, your paper probably contains "hanging quotations." You must think about what to write before and after the source in order to integrate your sources smoothly and meaningfully. In order to use evidence and information from sources effectively, the following four elements should be included in your writing:

1. Attribution

Signal that you are using a source by:

2. Information from the source

Then, provide relevant information from source: This will support the idea or point that you are making (in the paragraph) and can be brought in as quote, paraphrase or summary.

3. Citation

Next, include your citation (depending on the lead-in). This clarifies who the author of the ideas and directs the reader to information on the Works Cited page.

Note: All ideas from source should be cited at the sentence level and sections from source identified clearly.

4. Bridging and comment/analysis

Bridging establishes a logical connection between the idea that you are making and the source information. It can be a word, sentence or two that indicates what will follow will be information from a source. When using outside sources in your writing, you should not only “integrate” before the information. You must make sense of the information for the reader or explain its significance. Discuss, analyze, comment and clarify the relevance of the information to your point, controlling idea or thesis. Give the information meaning in light of your essay.

5. Plagiarism

Plagiarism is a serious offense. If you are caught plagiarizing you can be dismissed from University. For more information visit the AUC Academic Integrity website. Try this excellent self-test to identify plagiarism too.

If you are still unsure of when to cite or if you are unsure of your paraphrasing please visit the Writing Center. Take your sources with you and check your work with one of our tutors before you turn it in as your own.