EMBEDDING QUOTATIONS.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Short Story Unit: Theme Assignment Preparation
Advertisements

MLA Format Rules for Writing Research Papers Learn it, live it, love it!
What is MLA and why do we use it?
M.L.A. Formatting and Style. General Format MLA style specifies guidelines for formatting manuscripts and using the English language in writing. MLA style.
FOLLOW THESE STEPS FOR A SUCCESSFUL PAPER! JUNIOR RESEARCH PAPER STRUCTURE.
Evaluator Identification & Preview Sign your name at the end of the essay. Review objective of the PROGRESS CHECK. Take 2 minutes to preview your peers.
How to use, punctuate, and integrate successfully QUOTES.
Citing Sources.
DOCUMENTATION Fiction.
Paraphrasing and Using Quotations in the Body of Your Text
Common Writing Problems (Friendly Reminders to keep in mind for Test 2 and other Essays)
MLA Overview for Literature Classes Kelli McBride.
Creating a Well Written Essay “Charlie” issues addressed.
Kelli McBride. 1. People deserve and require credit for their work. 2. Successfully completing literature classes requires students learn to write, think.
Several FACTS or REASONS are discussed rather than only one being REPEATED.
Editor’s Guide Please edit only the sections you’re being asked to edit!
Do you have two short quotes? Hopefully, there is at least one in each paragraph. Each short quote should be embedded grammatically into your paragraphs.
BEGINNING AND ENDING YOUR PAPER (You mean these paragraphs actually matter?!?
THE STYLE OF QUOTE INTEGRATION Quote Integration – Part 2.
EMBEDDING QUOTATIONS IN A SENTENCE. Each piece of quoted material in a paragraph must have a transition that gives the context and background for that.
MLA Formatting. MLA- What is it? MLA stands for the Modern Language Association Outlines standards to follow for parenthetical citations Allows us to.
FOLLOW THESE STEPS FOR A SUCCESSFUL PAPER! JUNIOR RESEARCH PAPER STRUCTURE.
Referencing Quotes MLA Style. Short quotes: 4 lines or less Introduce the quotation with speaker, source, or context phrase Signal Phrases may also come.
The Giver, Fahrenheit 451 & Pleasantville Writing Task What is the common theme of these three stories? What is the common message of these stories? What.
MLA Format Learning how to use MLA format for writing assignments.
Week 7 Caleb Humphreys. Free Write (10 minutes)  Create a basic outline for your rhetorical analysis. Include your thesis statement and important points.
MLA Citations Woo hoo!. MLA…WHAT? Hopefully you all are a little familiar with MLA citation format and remember how to use it from other classes.
RESEARCH ESSAY: FOCUSED PEER REVISIONS English 9 Honors, Mrs. Miller.
In-text citations.
Literary Analysis Argument Essay
MLA Format - Basics.
In-Text Citations MLA Formatting Guide.
English 1-2 MLA Handbook.
MLA – Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Citing Sources
Literary Analysis.
MLA Format Font Spacing Headers Times New Roman Size 12
English 1-2 MLA Handbook.
The Synthesis Essay.
Your Guide to a Mature Literary Analysis
MLA Format and Plagiarism
Literary Analysis #1 Common Problems
MLA: in-text citations
MLA Format MLA Format  Titles, Headings, Margins, In-text citations, Formatting Quotations and creating a Works cited .
Quote Integration & Analysis
In-Text Citations MLA.
APA Format (American Psychological Association)
Writing a good expository Essay
Introduction to your Film Studies Unit Summative Essay
APA TIPS.
Things to Remember… When Writing Essays.
MLA Essay Formatting EHS English Dept.
How to Integrate Quotes in Literary Analysis
use 12pt. Standard font (Times New Roman), and
Quoting and citations AP LANG.
The font should be Times New Roman and a 12 point font size
Use this for EVERY essay.
English 2 MLA Handbook.
Please sit with your Huck Finn mini groups
A method of organizing & analyzing evidence
The essay Common Mistakes
Research Paper Editing and Revision Part One - Format
Literary Analysis Workshop
MLA Format and Plagiarism
EMBEDDING QUOTATIONS.
MLA: Formatting Quotes
Integrating Quotes using MLA format
Integrating Quotes using MLA format
Things to Remember… When Writing Essays.
Incorporating quoted material into literary analysis
A.C.E.: Using the A.C.E. Format to Answer Questions
Presentation transcript:

EMBEDDING QUOTATIONS

a novel by John Green, has proper M.L.A. in-text citation formatting? 1. Which of the following lines taken from page 88 of Looking for Alaska, “If people were like rain, I was like drizzle and she was a hurricane.” (Green, 88) “If people were like rain, I was like drizzle and she was a hurricane” (Green, 88). “If people were like rain, I was like drizzle and she was a hurricane” (Green 88). “If people were like rain, I was like drizzle and she was a hurricane.” (Green, page 88) “If people were like rain, I was like drizzle and she was a hurricane” (Green, page 88).

a novel by John Green, has proper M.L.A. in-text citation formatting? 1. Which of the following lines taken from page 88 of Looking for Alaska, “If people were like rain, I was like drizzle and she was a hurricane.” (Green, 88) “If people were like rain, I was like drizzle and she was a hurricane” (Green, 88). “If people were like rain, I was like drizzle and she was a hurricane” (Green 88). “If people were like rain, I was like drizzle and she was a hurricane.” (Green, page 88) “If people were like rain, I was like drizzle and she was a hurricane” (Green, page 88).

“If people were like rain, I was like drizzle and she was a hurricane” (Green 88). In M.L.A. format, notice there is no period immediately after the quote.

“If people were like rain, I was like drizzle and she was a hurricane” (Green 88). In M.L.A. format, notice there is no period immediately after the quote. Instead, the period is placed at the end of the page citation, outside of the parentheses.

Great, but what if the quote I want to use ends with a question mark or exclamation mark?

Great, but what if the quote I want to use ends with a question mark or exclamation mark? Then, include those ending marks within the quote, but still use the period at the very end of the citation.

Great, but what if the quote I want to use ends with a question mark or exclamation mark? Then, include those ending marks within the quote, but still use the period at the very end of the citation. Like this: “What’s the matter, Nick? Do you object to shaking hands with me?” (Fitzgerald 179). Quote taken from F. Scott Fitzgerald’s masterpiece, The Great Gatsby

Great, but what if the quote I want to use ends with a question mark or exclamation mark? Then, include those ending marks within the quote, but still use the period at the very end of the citation. Like this: “What’s the matter, Nick? Do you object to shaking hands with me?” (Fitzgerald 179). For clarity, keep this question mark. Also include this period.

2. Pretend this line is part of a body paragraph support section 2. Pretend this line is part of a body paragraph support section. What’s wrong with the underlined part of the quote frame/set-up structure? For example, Green writes, “If people were like rain...

2. Pretend this line is part of a body paragraph support section 2. Pretend this line is part of a body paragraph support section. What’s wrong with the underlined part of the quote frame/set-up structure? For example, Green writes, “If people were like rain... Doesn’t give enough background Assumes the reader knows the story Sounds clunky/abrupt/mechanical All quotes need a transition of some sort and a frame/background to explain what’s happening in the quote

A better frame: For example, Miles “Pudge” Halter, the story’s protagonist, is drawn to the energetic force of Alaska, a girl at his new school, and explains, “If people were like rain, I was like drizzle and she was a hurricane” (Green 88). Now the reader has a better understanding of what’s happening in the story. As you write, always assume the reader of your essay has not read the original texts you are discussing.

A better frame: For example, Miles “Pudge” Halter, the story’s protagonist, is drawn to the energetic force of Alaska, a girl at his new school, and explains, “If people were like rain, I was like drizzle and she was a hurricane” (Green 88). Then, develop this idea by symbolically connecting the girl to the storm – both cause people to be awe-struck, but both also cause devastating destruction.

3. Circle the proper verb tense to use when quoting source material: Past tense Present tense It doesn’t matter as long as the writer uses a consistent verb tense

3. Circle the proper verb tense to use when quoting source material: Past tense Present tense It doesn’t matter as long as the writer uses a consistent verb tense

4. Write two present-tense verbs: 5. Write two past-tense verbs:

Write two present-tense verbs: argues believes cautions denies examines Write two past-tense verbs: argued believed cautioned denied examined

6. Should you include quoted material from your source/s in your introductory paragraph? Why or why not?

6. Should you include quoted material from your source/s in your introductory paragraph? Why or why not? NO! Quoted material from sources belongs in body paragraphs, where it can be analyzed or discussed. Resist the urge to launch your essay with a quote from the book you’re about to discuss or the research you’re about to present. The reader wants to hear your voice as the essay begins.

7. Are slight edits to the original quotes allowed as you place the material in your essay? Explain your answer.

7. Are slight edits to the original quotes allowed as you place the material in your essay? Explain your answer. YES, but changes to the original text are only allowed when you need to clarify pronouns, add necessary information to aid readers’ understanding, or adjust verb tenses to grammatically correct the flow of your sentence.

7. Are slight edits to the original quotes allowed as you place the material in your essay? Explain your answer. YES, but changes to the original text are only allowed when you need to clarify pronouns, add necessary information to aid readers’ understanding, or adjust verb tenses to grammatically correct the flow of your sentence. These edits must be marked with brackets: [ ]

So, let’s say you want to use this quote in a paper about endangered species: “If there are not enough young to balance deaths, the end of the species is inevitable.” Quote taken from Jane Goodall’s non-fiction book, Hope for Animals and Their World

“If there are not enough young to balance deaths, the end of the species is inevitable” (Goodall 83). An embedded quote in a body paragraph sentence with minor edits, might look like this: Goodall paints a dire picture, reminding the reader that without “enough young to balance deaths, the end of the [Brown Spider Monkey] is inevitable” (Goodall 83).

NEVER alter the meaning of the original text with an edit. Make sure your usage of all quoted and paraphrased material is true to the original author’s intent.

8. If a quote that you want to use in your essay is longer than four lines, what should you do? First, reconsider whether you want to actually use that full quote. It’s far better to boil down whatever you find interesting about that quote to the essential elements that you want to analyze/discuss and just paraphrase the rest. Think more text in your paragraph impresses your teacher and makes you seem smart? You’re wrong.

If you’re still committed to filling your page with a lengthy quote, you’ll need to follow special rules as you place it in your body paragraph: Place quote in a free-standing block of text Omit quotation marks Indent the entire quote one inch from the margin Maintain double-spacing Parenthetical citation comes after the closing punctuation mark

Nah, it just looks like this: If you’re still committed to filling your page with a lengthy quote, you’ll need to follow special rules as you place it in your body paragraph: Place quote in a free-standing block of text Omit quotation marks Indent the entire quote one inch from the margin Maintain double-spacing Parenthetical citation comes after the closing punctuation mark Complicated? Nah, it just looks like this:

An example of a block quotation: Pretend that this is part of the body paragraph of your essay on J.D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye. You’re making an important point in this section and you’ve provided enough background so the reader isn’t confused about the text you’re going to present here: What really knocks me out is a book that, when you’re all done reading it, you wish the author that wrote it was a terrific friend of yours and you could call him up on the phone whenever you felt like it. That doesn’t happen much, though. (Salinger 18) The essay then continues with the standard margins once again. Notice that the indentations are one inch on both the left and right side. Also, the entire essay needs to be double-spaced.

EMBEDDING QUOTATIONS Any questions? Review your notes and the handout as you build your next body paragraph EMBEDDING QUOTATIONS