Summarizing, Paraphrasing, ICE, and Direct Quoting - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Summarizing, Paraphrasing, ICE, and Direct Quoting

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Title: Summarizing, Paraphrasing, ICE, and Direct Quoting


1
Summarizing, Paraphrasing, ICE, and Direct Quoting
2
Incorporating the ideas of others
  • To weave the information youve gathered into
    your own writing you can
  • Quote directly
  • Paraphrase
  • Summarize

3
The Methods
  • Direct quoting involves adding the exact words,
    inside quotation marks, to your text
  • Paraphrasing, or indirect quoting, involves
    rewriting a specific part/paragraph/idea in your
    own words
  • Summarizing involves succinctly giving a synopsis
    of the main ideas in your own words

4
Why quote?
  • All of us use others ideas to build on,
    challenge or disagree with
  • The writer must make it clear which ideas and
    words are his/hers and which belong to others
  • References add weight to your argument
  • Strict conventions exist on quoting others ideas
    or words
  • Use quotations to support your points, not make
    them.

5
The ICE Method
  • Use the ICE method
  • Introduce (first time you use a source-author
    name, source name, summary of source after that,
    just need signal phrase)
  • Cite
  • Explain

6
I - Introduction
  • An introduction can be simple, but ALWAYS needs
    three parts is ALWAYS in one sentence on its
    own (never separated)
  • The authors full name
  • The full name of the source (either in italics or
    quotation marks)
  • What the source is about

explains how to write a successful essay.
John Barton,
in his book, Writing in College,
7
C - Citation
  • Then the citation. This also has three parts
  • Signal phrase (who is saying it how are they
    saying it)
  • The direct quotation
  • The citation

(Barton 5).
He explains,
The ICE method is easy to remember
8
Sample signal phrases
  • Smith points out
  • Smith reports
  • Smith notes
  • Smith observes
  • Smith concludes
  • Smith recognizes
  • According to Smith
  • To quote Smith
  • As Smith has indicated
  • Smith defines as

Be sure the direct quote does not interrupt the
flow of your sentence
9
Dropped (or stand alone) quotations
  • Do not include a quotation in your document that
    stands alone.
  • This means it doesnt have a signal phrase.

10
E -Explanation
  • And the explanation, or justification for the
    quotation (usually 1-3 sentences long)

Most students can remember what the letters in
ICE stand for even years afterwards.
11
Words of Advice
  • Essays that use extensive direct quotations tend
    to lack voice, continuity, or authority.
  • If you offer quotations every few lines, your
    ideas become subordinate to other peoples ideas
    and voices. Your ideas are lost and the piece
    will not indicate that YOU have done any thinking
    or synthesizing.
  • Therefore, you are generally better off
    paraphrasing and summarizing material and using
    direct quotations sparingly.

12
Acknowledging your sources
  • There are conventions for indicating the source
    of the quotations and ideas youve used in your
    writing
  • 1. The bibliography (i.e., References APA or
    Works Cited MLA) at the end of the paper
  • 2. Parenthetical citations that follow an
    individual quotation or reference in your text
  • Your essays will require BOTH

13
Summarizing
  • Summarizing takes the entire source and puts it
    into your own words.
  • Summarize the main ideas only
  • Be concise
  • No quotations
  • Tends to be shorter than the original source (In
    this class, your summaries will be a paragraph
    5-7 sentences)
  • Starts off with an introduction of the source (I
    of ICE)

14
A Paraphrase is
  • Your own version of the meaning of the ideas
    and/or information of someone else a very few
    essential words of the source's may be included.
  • A proper way of using information from a source
    who you cite.
  • Different from a summary in that it consists of
    approximately the same number of words as the
    original whereas a summary focuses on the main
    idea and condenses information.

15
Paraphrasing Guidelines
  • Do not alter the authors original message
  • Do not eliminate any significant background
    information
  • Do not misrepresent the authors intentions
  • Do not copy the original wording too closely
  • Dont just change a few words or shuffle things
    around read the passage several times and
    completely rewrite it.

16
Paraphrasing Tips
  • 1. Reread the original passage to grasp its full
    meaning.
  • 2. Think about the sense, the purpose, the
    reasoning of the original then write out your
    paraphrase.
  • 3. Check your version with the original to make
    sure that yours accurately expresses all the
    essential information without relying on the same
    phrasing or form of expression.
  • 4. Use quotation marks to identify any unique
    terms you have borrowed exactly from the source.
  • 5. Jot down a few words to remind yourself later
    about how you plan on using your paraphrase.
    Write a keyword or phrase to indicate the subject
    of your paraphrase.
  • 6. Record the source (including the page) so that
    you can credit it easily if you decide to
    incorporate the material into your paper.

17
Example of a Paraphrase
  • In a far away, long ago kingdom, Cinderella is
    living happily with her mother and father until
    her mother dies. Cinderella's father remarries a
    cold, cruel woman who has two daughters, Drizella
    and Anastasia. When the father dies, Cinderella's
    wicked stepmother turns her into a virtual
    servant in her own house. Meanwhile, across town
    in the castle, the King determines that his son
    the Prince should find a suitable bride and
    provide him with a required number of
    grandchildren. So the King invites every eligible
    maiden in the kingdom to a fancy dress ball,
    where his son will be able to choose his bride.
    Cinderella has no suitable party dress for a
    ball, but her friends the mice, lead by Jaques
    and Gus, and the birds lend a hand in making her
    one, a dress the evil stepsisters immediately
    tear apart on the evening of the ball. At this
    point, enter the Fairy Godmother, who creates a
    pumpkin carriage and dress for her to arrive at
    the royal ball under the understanding that it
    would disappear at the stroke of midnight. She
    and the prince meet and fall in love at first
    glance. She is also given glass slippers, one of
    which she loses on her way hurrying out of the
    ball. The prince, after finding the shoe,
    creates a search team to find the wearer. The
    stepsisters try to get in the way of Cinderella
    being discovered however, the shoe only fit
    Cinderella. Despite her shabby appearance, the
    Prince allows Cinderella to try on the shoe, and
    the rest, as they say, is fairy tale history.

18
Summarizing
  • Condensing a writers ideas into a much shorter
    piece with your words
  • Summaries allow you to sort through the
    information in the source and report only what
    you consider to be essential.

19
Example of a Summary
  • Though put to work by her evil stepmother and
    stepsisters, Cinderella manages to get a ball
    gown by the help of her friends and make it to
    the ball where she meets the Prince. There, they
    fall in love, she loses her shoe, reunites with
    the Prince, and lives happily ever after.

20
Why Summarizing/Paraphrasing is Important
  • The mental process required for successful
    paraphrasing helps you to grasp the full meaning
    of the original.
  • It helps you control the temptation to quote too
    much.
  • It is better than quoting information from an
    undistinguished passage.
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