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Published byRodney Gibbs Modified over 9 years ago
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Paraphrasing
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Misrepresenting Information DO NOT take ideas out of context by omitting crucial information.
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Taking Notes Summarize: Restating a general idea Paraphrase: Putting information from the text into your own words Quote: Taking a direct quote from the source (word for word)
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Four Phases of Paraphrasing 1. Determine the main idea of the text. **This will help you to avoid misrepresenting the information. 2. Identify the specific information that you want to use. **Determine specific lines/phrases from the text that are most relevant to your argument. 3. Record the information in your own words. 4. Cite the information. **NOTE: Even though you are not directly citing a quote, you are still referring to an idea that is not your own. Make sure that you cite the information so as to avoid plagiarizing.
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Plagiarism is the practice of taking someone else’s work or ideas and passing them off as one’s own.
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“On average, every third day last year a hate crime was reported in Orange County. That may seem like a lot of incidents, and it is, but the 122 crimes reported in 2000 represented an 11% decrease from 1999– and it was the lowest level of cases reported in more than a decade. Why the decrease? Officials generally cite the healthy economy as a factor when there is a drop in reported crimes of all kinds” (“Bring Hate Crime Into the Light”). Let’s Try One
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Four Phases of Paraphrasing 1. Determine the main idea: 2. Specific information: (underline in original passage) 3. & 4. Paraphrase with citation:
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