paraphrase and summary. paraphrase you recast a passage of text into your own words. a paraphrase...

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Paraphrase and Summary

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Page 1: Paraphrase and Summary. Paraphrase You recast a passage of text into your own words. A paraphrase should be approximately the same length as the original

Paraphrase and Summary

Page 2: Paraphrase and Summary. Paraphrase You recast a passage of text into your own words. A paraphrase should be approximately the same length as the original

Paraphrase

• You recast a passage of text into your own words.

• A paraphrase should be approximately the same length as the original text.

• The purpose of a paraphrase is to clarify the meaning of the original for your audience.

Page 3: Paraphrase and Summary. Paraphrase You recast a passage of text into your own words. A paraphrase should be approximately the same length as the original

When to Paraphrase

• The original text should be complex enough—either in terms of meaning or language—that it is necessary or useful to paraphrase.

• Dense, archaic, confusing, or abstract text can be paraphrased, so your audience has a clearer understanding of the point the author is making.

Page 4: Paraphrase and Summary. Paraphrase You recast a passage of text into your own words. A paraphrase should be approximately the same length as the original

Summary

• Like paraphrase, a summary recasts text into your own words.

• Unlike paraphrase, a summary should be appreciably shorter than the original.

• You can summarize large texts—like books or articles.

• You can summarize smaller pieces of text—like sections of text, graphs, and lists.

Page 5: Paraphrase and Summary. Paraphrase You recast a passage of text into your own words. A paraphrase should be approximately the same length as the original

What is the difference?

• Length.

• When you summarize, you are actually also paraphrasing because you are taking the original text and putting it into your own words.

• Therefore, think of paraphrasing as putting the text into your own language, but summary both puts the text into your own language AND makes the original shorter.

Page 6: Paraphrase and Summary. Paraphrase You recast a passage of text into your own words. A paraphrase should be approximately the same length as the original

Using Summary or Paraphrase

• You use summary and paraphrase like you do any supporting material—to support and validate your ideas.

• You do not use summary and paraphrase to present your ideas for you—it is always used for support.

• You need to show where summary and paraphrase both begin and end in your text, so there is no confusion about what is yours and what you are borrowing.

Page 7: Paraphrase and Summary. Paraphrase You recast a passage of text into your own words. A paraphrase should be approximately the same length as the original

Indicate where the paraphrase or summary begins and ends.

• Show where these elements begin by using the same kind of introductory phrasing as you do direct quotation.

• This means you use signal or introductory phrases or text and indicate parenthetically where we can find the original text.

• If you use direct quotation within the paraphrase or summary, you indicate that you’ve done so with quotation marks.

Page 8: Paraphrase and Summary. Paraphrase You recast a passage of text into your own words. A paraphrase should be approximately the same length as the original

For example

I am paraphrasing and summarizing a long section of text on pages 34-35 in Gatto.

Gatto discusses Menken’s goals for education as a “threefold” approach to citizenship which affected Americans both at home and in their public lives (34-35).

Here I know where the paraphrased section begins (Gatto)and where it ends (page numbers in parentheses).

Page 9: Paraphrase and Summary. Paraphrase You recast a passage of text into your own words. A paraphrase should be approximately the same length as the original

If I don’t begin with the author’s name

I am still paraphrasing and summarizing a long section of text on pages 34-35 in Gatto.

The author discusses Menken’s goals for education as a “threefold” approach to citizenship which affected Americans both at home and in their public lives (Gatto 34-35).

Here I know where the paraphrased section begins (indicative phrase) and where it ends (author’s name and page numbers in parentheses).