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Integrating Sources

APA Style

 

 

 

Methods

SummarizeRestate concisely the main facts or ideas of a longer work.  You may summarize entire books, whole articles or essays, or portions of a work.  When writing a summary, be accurate, be brief, and use your own words and style to express the idea.

 

ParaphraseRestate another person’s ideas in your own words.  A paraphrase is usually a sentence or two, is used for portions of a work, and does not necessarily condense the original version the way a summary does.

 

QuoteRecord another person’s exact words to preserve their accuracy or to relay especially vivid, well-phrased, or dramatic statements.

 

 

What to Avoid

Plagiarism Intentionally or unintentionally giving the impression that words or ideas from another person are your own.  The best way to avoid plagiarism, a serious academic offense, is to make sure you have something to say about your topic first.  Then follow the conventions of summarizing, paraphrasing, and quoting to give credit to the other people whose information you’re sharing with readers.

 

 

Two Steps

Whether you choose to summarize, paraphrase, or directly quote another person’s ideas, the same two principles apply:

 

1.     Include the author’s last name and the date either in a signal phrase or in parentheses at the end of the line.  When quoting, also put the page number in parentheses at the end of the line.

 

2.     Make sure the citation matches a corresponding entry on the Reference page where you give the full publication information for each source.


 

Examples

 

 

Original:  Children of divorce have no choice.  If the parent with whom they live, usually the mother, has to or wants to work, the children must pick up some of the slack.  It doesn’t usually hurt them and, in fact, many adults of divorce, in retrospect, say that the arrangement worked amazingly well and propelled them on the road to competence and independence as an adult.

 

Beal, E.W., & Hochman, G.  (1999, November).  Adult children of divorce.  Parenting.  23-27.

 

Summary:  According to Beal and Hochman (1999), children living with a divorced parent may actually benefit from some of the responsibilities they must take on.

 

Paraphrase:  Many people who, as children of divorced parents, were raised in a single-parent home acknowledge that they gained skills that helped them to mature as adults (Beal & Hochman, 1999).

 

Quote:  As Beal and Hochman (1999) report, “Children of divorce have no choice.  If the parent with whom they live, usually the mother, has to or wants to work, the children must pick up some of the slack.  It doesn’t usually hurt them and, in fact, many adults of divorce . . . say that the arrangement worked amazingly well” (p. 23).

 

Plagiarism:  If a child’s divorced parent with whom they live, usually the mother, has to or wants to work, the child must pick up some of the slack.  This doesn’t usually hurt them though.

 

 

 

 

Directions:  Now try working with the following original passage.  First, write a one-sentence summary of the passage.  Then paraphrase one of the key ideas.  Finally select an original sentence and introduce it as a quotation. 

 

Original:  Until just a few years ago, making a baby boy or a baby girl was pretty much a hit-or-miss affair.  Not anymore.  Parents who have access to the latest genetic testing techniques can now predetermine their baby’s sex with great accuracy.

 

Lemonick, M. D.  (1999, January 11).  Designer babies.  Time.  64-65.

 

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