IMAGES

  1. Paraphrasing vs. Summarizing vs. Quoting: What's the Difference

    misconceptions about summarizing paraphrasing and quoting

  2. The Differences Among Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing

    misconceptions about summarizing paraphrasing and quoting

  3. Misconceptions about Paraphrasing, Summarizing, and Quoting [Mappe_E12B]

    misconceptions about summarizing paraphrasing and quoting

  4. The Differences Among Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing

    misconceptions about summarizing paraphrasing and quoting

  5. Paraphrasing vs. Summarizing vs. Quoting: What's the Difference

    misconceptions about summarizing paraphrasing and quoting

  6. Differences between quoting, paraphrasing and summarising

    misconceptions about summarizing paraphrasing and quoting

VIDEO

  1. EAPP Lesson 3: Paraphrasing, Quoting and Summarizing

  2. Research Vocabulary: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, Quoting,and Citing

  3. 3 Common Misconceptions about Summarizing, Paraphrasing and Quoting

  4. Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Quoting Worksheet

  5. Academic Integrity Digest (Episode 3, PART 2): Summarizing, Paraphrasing, Quoting

  6. Assignment Guide

COMMENTS

  1. Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing

    Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing. This handout is intended to help you become more comfortable with the uses of and distinctions among quotations, paraphrases, and summaries. This handout compares and contrasts the three terms, gives some pointers, and includes a short excerpt that you can use to practice these skills.

  2. Quoting vs. Paraphrasing vs. Summarizing

    What is summarizing? Next, we come to summarizing. Summarizing is on a much larger scale than quoting or paraphrasing. While similar to paraphrasing in that you use your own words, a summary's primary focus is on translating the main idea of an entire document or long section. Summaries are useful because they allow you to mention entire chapters or articles—or longer works—in only a few ...

  3. PDF Principle Three: When Should I Principle Four: What Must I Avoid

    for a sample quote. Paraphrasing: Writers often confuse paraphrasing with summarizing, but the two have different purposes. Paraphrasing shares a similar purpose to quoting; you paraphrase to support your argument—but when you paraphrase, you do not use the author's words verbatim. See . Principle Two . for a sample paraphrase. Summarizing:

  4. Quoting, Paraphrasing, & Summarizing

    Quoting, paraphrasing, and summarizing are all different ways of including evidence and the ideas of others into your assignments. Using evidence from credible sources to support your thesis is an important part of academic writing. Citing the source of any quote, paraphrase, or summary is an important step to avoid plagiarism.

  5. PDF Quoting, Summarizing & Paraphrasing

    after summarizing to check for accuracy of information and unintentional use of phrases from the original text. Be sure to cite your summary. Paraphrase Practice Now paraphrase the quote. Remember that when you paraphrase, you convey more detailed ideas than in a summary using different words and different sentence structures.

  6. Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Quoting

    Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Quoting. Depending on the conventions of your discipline, you may have to decide whether to summarize a source, paraphrase a source, or quote from a source. Scholars in the humanities tend to summarize, paraphrase, and quote texts; social scientists and natural scientists rely primarily on summary and paraphrase.

  7. Paraphrasing, Summarising and Quoting

    A paraphrase offers an alternative to using direct quotations and allows you to integrate evidence/source material into assignments. Paraphrasing can also be used for note-taking and explaining information in tables, charts and diagrams. When to paraphrase. Paraphrase short sections of work only i.e. a sentence or two or a short paragraph:

  8. Quoting, Summarizing, and Paraphrasing

    Paraphrasing. When we paraphrase, we are processing information or ideas from another person's text and putting them in our own words. The main difference between paraphrase and summary is scope: if summarizing means rewording and condensing, then paraphrasing means rewording without drastically altering length.

  9. PDF Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing Sources

    Summarize and paraphrase Summarizing and paraphrasing are similar; both involve putting a source's ideas into your own words. The difference is one of scale. A summary is similar to the abstract of a research article or the blurb on the back of a book: it succinctly describes a much longer piece of writing. You might describe the key points of

  10. The Writing Center

    Summary must be cited with in-text citations and on your reference page. Summarize when: Paraphrasing. Paraphrasing is stating an idea or passage in your own words. You must significantly change the wording, phrasing, and sentence structure (not just a few words here and there) of the source. These also must be noted with in-text citations and ...

  11. What's the Difference? Summarizing, Paraphrasing, & Quoting

    Oppositely, the main difference between quoting, paraphrasing, and summarizing is that quoting is done word for word from the original work. Both paraphrasing and summarizing only touch on the key points and are written with some variation from the initial author's work, usually in the style and tone of the new author.

  12. Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing

    How smoothly you integrate evidence impacts your credibility as a researcher and writer. There are three primary ways to integrate evidence: quoting, paraphrasing, and summarizing. For all of these, particularly quoting, there is a "formula" to follow: 1) introduce, 2) insert, and 3) explain. The introduce step entails preparing the reader ...

  13. Quoting, paraphrasing, and summarizing: what's the difference?

    A summary provides an overview of an idea or topic. You might wish to summarize parts of a source if you're writing a literature review as part of a longer research paper. Summarizing requires you to sum up the key points of a text, argument, or idea. A summary will be shorter than the original material. Even if you're not using any of the ...

  14. Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Quoting

    These resources provide lesson plans and handouts for teachers interested in teaching students how to avoid plagiarism. The resources ask students to practice summarizing, paraphrasing, and quoting. The resources with titles that include "Handout" provide handouts that are free to print for your students by using the print option in your web browser.

  15. Paraphrasing, summarising and quoting

    Summarising and paraphrasing are the preferred ways of including information from other sources in your own work. Summarising. When you summarise, you are working from the notes you have taken from various sources during the reading and research you have done for your assignment. ... it should be indented in a separate paragraph as a block ...

  16. Academic Writing: Summarising, paraphrasing and quoting

    Summarising, paraphrasing and quoting; Hub Home; Summarising, Paraphrasing and Quotations. Academic writing requires that you use literature sources in your work to demonstrate the extent of your reading (breadth and depth), your knowledge, understanding and critical thinking. Literature can be used to provide evidence to support arguments and ...

  17. PDF Quoting, Paraphrasing, & Summarizing

    Quoting, Paraphrasing, & Summarizing Research and the use of different kinds of evidence and texts are important skills and necessary strategies in writing, developing an argument, and participating in academic discourse. In other words, the work you engage in and produce at the university will

  18. Paraphrasing, Summarizing, and Quoting: What's the Difference?

    Paraphrasing is when you take someone else's ideas or words and rephrase them as your own. Summarizing is to give the reader an overview of the key points of a text. Quoting is when you write exactly what someone else has said, word for word. Anyone who has written a paper, especially an academic paper, has struggled to answer the question ...

  19. 4: Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Avoiding Plagiarism

    6488. Steven D. Krause. Eastern Michigan University. Learning how to effectively quote and paraphrase research can be difficult and it certainly takes practice. Hopefully, your abilities to make good use of your research will improve as you work through the exercises in part two and three of The Process of Research Writing, not to mention as ...

  20. Common Mistakes

    Common Mistakes. Misunderstanding of key concepts and ideas that stand in the way of understanding meaning. Reading only parts of an article or reading it to quickly. Paraphrasing and presenting the abstract or conclusion as a summary. Picking whole sentences from the source text and stringing them together. Quoting whole sentences.

  21. 3 Common Misconceptions about Summarizing, Paraphrasing and Quoting

    Badua, Natasha Gwyneth M12A