So, when you embark on a research project and are faced with referencing your research in your essay, take the following into consideration.
- Research First: When starting a research project, you shouldn't start with drafting the actual essay. Instead, invest in research and learn more about your topic.
- Active Research: Good source integration means good research, and good research means taking the time to read closely, take notes, and evaluate your sources.
- Take Notes: Jotting down interesting information, highlighting or bookmarking intriguing passages, and otherwise making personal records of what you learn from your research.
- Introduce & Explain sources: Any time you put research into your own writing you are repurposing and recontextualizing it. Therefore, it is essential to take the time to explain your research before summarizing, paraphrasing, or quoting it (also, see Hit & Run Quotes below).
- Summarize: Explaining the main points, thesis, and arguments of a source.
- Paraphrase: Taking a selection of a larger piece and reiterating the main points in your own words.
- Quote: Using the exact words of a source in your own piece.
- Blended Words: Carefully integrating a quote with your own words.
- In-Text Citations: Knowing where to place in-text citations, and why they go there.
- Synthesis: Finding and recognizing where your sources have related points so you can reference them together.
Knowing how to integrate sources is important, but sometimes a good way to figure out why we do something is to understand how not to do it.
- Hit & Run Quotes: This term comes from a book entitled They Say/I Say, and it refers to improperly introduced and explained quotes.
- Patchwriting: Paraphrasing and quoting at the same time and without quotation marks. This involves taking a selection from a source, changing a few words here and there, and not treating it as a quote. This can be borderline plagiarism. Instead, quote or use more of your own words.
- Just the first few pages: Don't just rely on a few pithy statements from the opening pages of a book or article; take the time to go through the entire piece and you'll find more useful information.
- Excessive Integration: There is such a thing as too much of a good thing. Sometimes, it's easier to just quote ad nauseum or even give too much supplementary information.
- Plagiarism: The failure to properly acknowledge research, or, taking the work of another passing it off as your own. This is one of the worst things you can ever do.
Improper source integration can harm an essay. Sometimes it’s easy to just drop in quotes or citations and call it good. However, good source integration is more than just a stylistic issue. Coherent writing means a coherent thought process, so coherently integrating sources suggests a better understanding of the material. An author who drops in quotes willy-nilly probably just found and crammed them in there and doesn’t understand what they are saying. Taking the time to introduce, explain, synthesize, and blend shows you know the information well enough it is part of your own thought process and knowledge: it shows you are confident in your knowledge and you can control the information.
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