Section6 Synthesising Text Version
Section6 Synthesising Text Version
Section6 Synthesising Text Version
Synthesising
What is Synthesising?
Synthesising is combining different aspects of your ideas and research and the ideas of others in order to
produce new ideas. It is an important aspect of academic writing; that is,
• to synthesise is an important and complex skill in Essay Writing, Literature Reviews and other
forms of Academic Writing.
Why Synthesise?
At university you need to demonstrate that you can conduct research and then use that research in
conjunction with your own ideas to produce new ideas or arguments. Combining your information in
thoughtful ways to produce new ideas or arguments is synthesising.
To write assignments that reply on
a sound argument based on sound
findings. This is the process of
synthesising.
Synthesising is…
Synthesising is an on-going process. You begin with an idea of your own. Your reading and research adds to
and develops that pre-existing idea or information. Along the way, stop and think about what you have read
and consider where it fits into your argument.
Therefore, sysnthesising is:
• An on-going process, where you develop an idea or opinion based on merging your new
found ideas with your prior knowledge.
• Evolving thinking – stop along the way and think about what you have just read – and
consider where it fits into your argument.
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Academic Integrity Program Synthesising
How to Synthesise: a step-by-step approach (6 steps)
This is a step-by-step guide to synthesising materials from a number of different sources:
1. You should begin by brainstorming your ideas on the topic.
2. Then read relevant material.
3. Make notes on key points from this material. Remember to always use your own voice and to
reference the ideas and words of others.
4. Then create a summary for each text.
5. Identity common ideas and differences between the texts.
6. From all of this information you now synthesise or write a new text.
Always with the Question and Thesis Statement in mind.
Step 1. Brainstorming
Brainstorming involves:
• Thinking about what you already know about the topic.
• Jotting down any idea, facts, connections or phrases that come to mind.
• Reading the question several times to get as much out of it as possible.
• Extracting key words from the question and note them down.
• Thinking hard about what you already know about the question and its key words.
Step 2. Read all relevant material
As you are doing this:
• Record bibliographic details of the text. You will need these later for your bibliography or reference list.
• Always keep your question in mind so that you select material relevant to your topic.
• The length of your assignment is also important to remember in terms of what information you should
keep and what is unnecessary or simply won’t fit into this assignment.
Step 3. Notes-making
When you are doing this:
• Always make notes with your question and thesis statement in mind.
• Organise them into a logical order that you will be able to follow easily later on.
• Try to make notes in your own words as this will help you to process and remember the material more
effectively. Using your own words in this way is called paraphrasing, while copying down a statement
exactly is quoting. Don’t forget to include references for your notes as well from the original sources.
Step 4. Summarising
After this, you need to convert your notes into short summaries. Your summaries should be no longer than a
paragraph or short list of points for each page of notes. When making your summary, read over your notes
and then convert the main ideas into simple sentences in your own words. Note that...
• A summary is similar to a paraphrase in that you must use your own (words) voice and sentence
structure.
• However, it is different from a paraphrase in that it must be shorter than the original text.
Step 5. Identify Common Ideas
The next stage requires you to find ideas that are common or different in a number of texts. A helpful
approach to this step is to always have your own ideas about the topic in mind first. Then look at different
texts. Do they take the same approach to that idea or information? How are they different to each other and
to your approach? Identify common ideas by:
• Reading a further two texts.
• Writing IN YOUR OWN VOICE the main ideas from the texts
• Sorting into a logical order
• Identifying similar ideas
• Identifying differences.
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Academic Integrity Program Synthesising
Step 6. Synthesise!
The final stage requires you to synthesise or put all of this information together into a new piece of
information. Using your summaries, as well as your own ideas about the topic as a whole, write 1-2 pages on
the topic. This synthesis should be a fresh look at the topic. It pulls together all of the information you have
gained from your reading from a number of sources and makes it your own. However, don’t forget to include
citations for the ideas of others as they are woven into your synthesis. This will ensure you don’t plagiarise.
Specifically:
• Write your new article (synthesise)
• Write IN YOUR VOICE
• A synthesis is a new product that brings together previously acquired information according to your
organisational scheme.
• Don’t forget to include citations for the ideas of others.
Synthesising Checklist
When you have finished synthesising a topic read over the checklist below. Have you completed each step? If
so, you have successfully synthesised your material!
1. Brainstorm
2. Read relevant material
3. Makes notes
4. Identify common ideas/differences
5. Summarise each text
6. Write new text
Don’t forget to cite (reference) all the sources used.
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