Paraphrase, Quote, Summarize
Paraphrase, Quote, Summarize
SUMMARIZE
Differences among quoting,
paraphrasing, and summarizing?
• These three ways of incorporating other
writers' work into your own writing differ
according to the closeness of your writing to
the source writing.
• Quotations must be identical to the original,
using a narrow segment of the source. They
must match the source document word for
word and must be attributed to the original
author.
• Paraphrasing involves putting a passage from
source material into your own words. A
paraphrase must also be attributed to the
original source. Paraphrased material is
usually shorter than the original passage,
taking a somewhat broader segment of the
source and condensing it slightly.
• Summarizing involves putting the main idea(s)
into your own words, including only the main
point(s). Once again, it is necessary to
attribute summarized ideas to the original
source. Summaries are significantly shorter
than the original and take a broad overview of
the source material.
Why use quotations, paraphrases,
and summaries?
• Provide support for claims or add credibility to your
writing
• Refer to work that leads up to the work you are now
doing
• Give examples of several points of view on a subject
• Call attention to a position that you wish to agree or
disagree with
• Highlight a particularly striking phrase, sentence, or
passage by quoting the original
• Expand the breadth or depth of your writing
• Writers frequently intertwine summaries, paraphrases,
and quotations. As part of a summary of an article, a
chapter, or a book, a writer might include paraphrases
of various key points blended with quotations of
striking or suggestive phrases as in the following
example:
• In his famous and influential work On the
Interpretation of Dreams, Sigmund Freud argues that
dreams are the "royal road to the unconscious" (page
#), expressing in coded imagery the dreamer's
unfulfilled wishes through a process known as the
"dream work" (page #).
A paraphrase is...