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Integrating sources by paraphrasing, summarising, and quoting
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Integrating sources by paraphrasing, summarising, and quoting

Source: https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/writing-effectively/paraphrasing-summarising/ Parent: https://learningessentials.auckland.ac.nz/learning-at-university/

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Integrating sources by paraphrasing, summarising, and quoting

Learn to integrate sources into your writing to strengthen your claims.

At university you are expected to read other people’s research and use their work as evidence to support your claims in your assignments. Direct quotes from other sources should only be used when absolutely necessary. It is best to paraphrase the quote or summarise the ideas when you use other people’s writing. If you do draw on someone else’s work, ensure you follow the format for the reference style you are using.  Doing this will help you avoid plagiarism.

Tip: Good summarising and paraphrasing begins with understanding what the author is saying. Remember to keep the author’s original meaning when you rewrite it in your own words. Remember also to reference for your summary, paraphrase, or quote and provide a citation within the body of your text.

How to summarise

Summarise a passage (or multiple passages) when you want to extract the main ideas only and use them as background material in your writing. A summary is usually much shorter than the original because the details are left out.

Tips on summarising.

Original text

For example, McDonald’s has expanded rapidly overseas in recent years. Its skill in managing fast-food operations has proven to be just as valuable in countries as diverse as France, Russia, China, Germany and Brazil as they have been in the United States. Prior to McDonald’s entry, none of these countries had American-style fast-food chains, so McDonald’s brought a unique product as well as unique skills to each country.

From:

Hill, C. W. L. (1994). International business: Competing in the global marketplace. Irwin.

Acceptable summaries

McDonald’s has successfully established both its product and operating style in many countries outside the United States (Hill, 1994).

Hill (1994) demonstrates that McDonald’s has successfully established both its product and operating style in many countries outside the United States.

How to paraphrase

Paraphrase a passage when you want to keep all the points in the original.

An acceptable paraphrase employs all these techniques to rewrite the original source:

Original text

For example, McDonald’s has expanded rapidly overseas in recent years. Its skill in managing fast-food operations has proven to be just as valuable in countries as diverse as France, Russia, China, Germany and Brazil as they have been in the United States. Prior to McDonald’s entry, none of these countries had American-style fast-food chains, so McDonald’s brought a unique product as well as unique skills to each country.

From:

Hill, C. W. L. (1994). International business: Competing in the global marketplace. Irwin.

Acceptable paraphrase

Hill (1994) cites McDonald’s as an example of a company that has been able to successfully expand into the international market. McDonald’s has created a global impact, not only with its “American-style” fast-food products, but also with its particular brand of management practices.

Plagiarism

Too close to the original and no source given:

In recent years, McDonald’s has expanded rapidly overseas. Countries as diverse as France, Russia, China, Germany and Brazil have proven to be just as valuable at managing fast-food chains as in the United States. Previously, none of these countries had American-style fast-food chains. McDonald’s brought unique skills and a unique product to these countries.

Types of paraphrasing

Word-level paraphrasing is when you exchange a word in the original text for another word. Some techniques include:

Practice word-level paraphrasing.

Word-level paraphrasing alone is not enough to build an acceptable paraphrase because it results in a paraphrase that is very similar to the original text. Combine this technique with sentence-level and text-level paraphrasing techniques to produce a good paraphrase.

Sentence-level paraphrasing is when you construct a new sentence that expresses the same meaning as the original text. Some techniques for this are:

Practice sentence-level paraphrasing.

Paraphrasing at text-level is paraphrasing a passage as a whole. As well as word-level and sentence-level paraphrasing, check that your paraphrase is coherent and unified.

Use cohesive devices such as:

Practice text-level paraphrasing.

How to quote

Quotes should be used sparingly in academic writing, so that your writing flows naturally and your ‘voice’ or opinion is strongly evident to the reader.  Use quotes only when it is important to communicate the actual words of the original writer. You may use quotes, for example, to:

Original text

Direct quotation is a type of textual borrowing that uses particular punctuation and explicit acknowledgement to create a direct, visible link with between the writer and source author.

Wette, R. (2021). Writing using sources for academic purposes: theory, research and practice. Routledge.

Acceptable quote

Wette (2021) describes direct quotations as ‘a type of textual borrowing that uses particular punctuation and explicit acknowledgement’ (p. 65) in order to establish a clear and direct link to the author of the original text.

Synthesising ideas from multiple sources

A good way to strengthen your claims is to integrate what multiple sources have said on a topic. This gives you the opportunity to compare, contrast, and express your critical thoughts on how these multiple sources inform your claim.

Read about Synthesising for more details.

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