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Research Paper Quotations
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- Slide 1: Quotations
Basic Principles
- Slide 2: First Principle
• Use sources as concisely as possible, so your
own thinking isn’t crowded out by your
presentation of other people’s thinking, or your
own voice by your quoting of other voices.
• Mention or summarize your source, perhaps
quoting occasional phrases, unless you have a
good reason to paraphrase closely or quote
extensively
- Slide 3: Good reasons to quote:
• Source author has made a point to clearly and concisely
that it can’t be expressed more clearly
• A certain phrase or sentence in the source is particularly
vivid or striking
• An important passage is sufficiently difficult, dense, or
rich
• A claim you are making is such that the doubting reader
will want to hear exactly what the source said
- Slide 4: Second Principle
• Never leave your reader in doubt as to when you
are speaking and when you are using materials
from a source
• Avoid this ambiguity by citing the source
immediately after using it
• Announce the source in your own sentences or
phrases preceding its appearance
- Slide 5: One further rule . . .
• Mention the nature or professional status of your
source if it is distinctive
• Describe the nature of a source that is especially
authoritative or distinctive
- Slide 6: Rules for Quoting
General Principles
- Slide 7: Quote only what you need or
what is really striking
• If you quote too much, you may convey the
impression that you haven’t digested the
material or that you are merely padding the
length of your paper.
• Keep your quotations under a sentence
whenever possible.
• Try to embed quotes gracefully into your
sentences
- Slide 8: Usually announce a quotation in the
words preceding it
• Your reader should enter the quoted passage
knowing who will be speaking.
• Withholding the identity of a source until a
citation at the end of the sentence is acceptable
when you invoke but do not discuss a source
OR when the identity of the quoted source is
much less important than, or a distraction from,
what the source says
- Slide 9: Dropped Quotation
• NOT - Although the bald eagle is still listed as an
endangered species, its ever-increasing population is
very encouraging. “The bald eagle seems to have
stabilized its population, at the very least, almost
everywhere” (Sheppard 96).
• Correct: Use a Signal Phrase - According to
ornithologist Jay Sheppard, “The bald eagle seems to
have stabilized its population, at the very least, almost
everywhere” (96).
- Slide 10: Choose your announcing verb
carefully
• Don’t say “Diamond states that” unless you
mean to imply a deliberate announcement.
• Choose a more neutral verb such as “writes,”
“observes,” “suggests,” “remarks”
• OR Choose a verb that catches the attitude you
want to convey such as “protests,” “charges,”
“replies,” “admits,” or “claims”
- Slide 11: Example
• Original from “Giving Teachers More Can
Reduce Youth Violence” by Stephen Goode:
“More and more educators are viewing discipline
‘as a kindness on the part of teachers, a
necessary part of growing up, as necessary to
personal growth,’” says Wallis (78).
- Slide 12: Construct your own sentence so the
quotation fits smoothly into it
• If you must add or change a word in the
quotation to make it fit into your sentence, put
brackets [ ] around the altered portion.
• The true test of ethics is “[w]hen a person does
the right thing and the wrong thing would be
easier” (Jones n.pg.)
• Always try to construct your sentence so that
you can quote verbatim, without this
cumbersome apparatus.
- Slide 13: Technical Rules for Using Quotes
- Slide 14: Don’t automatically put a comma
before a quotation
• Quotations are not dialogue
• Use a comma ONLY if the grammar of your
sentence requires it
- Slide 15: Punctuate the end of a quotation
embedded in your sentence with
whatever punctuation your sentence
requires
• Do not automatically use the source-author’s
punctuation
- Slide 16: Quote Verbatim
• Double check carefully
• If the source passage is misspelled or
ungrammatical, add in brackets after the
relevant word or phrase the Latin word [sic],
meaning thus, to make clear that the mistake is
in the source
- Slide 17: Ellipsis
• Nonessential parts of a quotation can be cut if the
overall meaning of the quotation is not changed.
• Indicate omissions of nonessential material from a
quotation by using ellipsis points, a series of three
dots, within brackets.
• Use three dots […] when cutting material within a
single sentence. Use four dots […]. when cutting a full
sentence, a paragraph, or more than a paragraph from
a quotation.
- Slide 18: Example of Omitting Material
• Original taken from article by Stephen Goode:
• What to do? School administrators are hiring more
security personnel and installing metal detectors at
entrances. But more importantly, teachers' unions are
urging schools to adopt strict behavior codes--and
enforce them. In some places, teachers have taken
disruptive students to court and persuaded judges to
fine the students and their families as well as have the
students expelled from school.
- Slide 19: Omitting Part of A Quote
• Now, what if you only want to use the 2nd sentence and the middle
part of the 4th? 2nd
Sent.
• Can you simply write:
• “School administrators are hiring more security personnel and
installing metal detectors at entrances. Teachers have taken
disruptive students to court and persuaded judges to fine the
students and their families.”
Middle
• ???????? of 4th
- Slide 20: NO!!!
This means you have
• omitted words at the
You must show that you have omitted material
beginning of this
between the quotation marks.
sentence
•
This This is the correct way:
means you
• “School administrators are hiring more security
have
personnel and installing metal detectors at
omitted
entrances. […]. […] teachers have taken
one or
moredisruptive students to court and persuaded
sentences. to fine the students and their families.”
judges
- Slide 21: A Quotation within A Quotation
• If you are writing a direct quote that already has
a direct quote in it…
• Change the double quotations to single
• Keep the name of the original speaker
• Put double quotation marks around all of the
information you take directly from the source.
- Slide 22: Parenthetical Documentation
And Quotations
- Slide 23: Documentation
• As you write the first draft, you must document.
• You will transfer the author’s last name and
page number from the source to your paper and
enclose this information in parentheses.
• This is called parenthetical documentation.
- Slide 24: Online Sources and Page Numbers
• If the source is online, but is a PDF file, meaning you
must use Acrobat Reader to access it, it will most likely
have page numbers.
– It will look like a photocopy of the original page in a magazine
or journal.
• All other online sources will most likely NOT have page
numbers.
- Slide 25: Online Sources and Page Numbers
• Yes, if you print from an online source, the page you
have printed will have page numbers, but…those
numbers can change.
– A quote on your page 2, if your font is at 12 pt. with 1.25 inch margins,
might be on page 1 if printed from my computer set on 10 pt. font and 1
inch margins.
• Even if the publication information tells you that the
article you are looking at was originally published on
page 14, it is not on page 14 online. So you will write
the abbreviation: n. pg.
- Slide 26: Basically…
• Unless you can actually SEE page numbers on
your screen while viewing a source online, you
should write n. pg.
• …the state of man” (Marks n. pg.).
- Slide 27: No Author?
• If the source has no author, place the title of the
article or book (whatever you have listed first on
your bibliography entry) in your parentheses.
• For long titles, you may abbreviate in your
citation:
– Complete title on BIB ENTRY: “Giving Teachers
More Can Reduce Youth Violence”
– Title in CITATION: “Giving Teachers More”
- Slide 28: Tricky, Tricky….
• I know your tricks! Continually referring to the 7+ words
of a complete title is not an effective use of space.
• Abbreviate very long titles, but be sure to use the first
word of the original title because it is the one you will
use to alphabetize the title on your Works Cited.
- Slide 29: Parenthetical Documentation
• To avoid interrupting the flow of your writing place the
parenthetical reference where a pause would naturally
occur (preferably at the end of a sentence), or near as
possible to the material documented.
• The parenthetical documentation precedes the
punctuation mark that concludes the sentence, clause,
or phrase containing the borrowed material (except in a
block quote).
- Slide 30: Example:
• A reference directly after the quotation follows
the closing quotation:
– In his Autobiography, Benjamin Franklin states that
he prepared a list of thirteen virtues (135-37).
• In most cases, it is best to omit a reference to the title of
the work within the sentence, if you have an author’s
name.
- Slide 31: Example:
• A reference directly after a quotation follows the
closing quotation mark.
– In the late Renaissance, Machiavelli contended that
human beings were by nature “ungrateful” and
“mutable” (1240), and Montaigne thought them
“miserable and puny” (1343).
- Slide 32: When to Cite
- Slide 33: Choose Direct Quotes Wisely
• Since you are allowed to use minimal direct
quotes in your paper, choose them wisely.
– If all direct quotes were run together, you should
have no more than 1/2 a page, considering the
minimum length of your paper is only 3 page + 1 line
on the fourth page.
• Also, make sure that the direct quotes you do
choose are no more than 1 1/2 typed lines.
- Slide 34: Whenever you use factual information
or data you found in a source
• Your reader needs to know who gathered the
information
• Your reader needs to be able to find its original form
• Always make clear how each source you use relates to
your argument
• Indicate to your reader in the words leading up to the
quote what you want the reader to notice or to focus on
- Slide 35: Whenever you quote verbatim
• Cite if you use two or more words in a row, or
even a single word or label that is distinctive
• Reader must be able to verify the accuracy and
context of your quotation
• Words you take verbatim must be in quotation
marks
- Slide 36: Whenever you make use of a
source’s distinctive structure
• Citing tells your reader that the strategy isn’t
original
• Citing allows your reader to consult the original
context
- Slide 37: When Not to Cite
- Slide 38: When the source and page location
of the relevant passage are obvious
• If you refer to the same page for many
sentences in a row, you don’t need to cite the
source again until you refer to a different page or
until you start a new paragraph
• Your language needs constantly to make clear
where you are drawing on a source
- Slide 39: When dealing with “common
knowledge”
• Common knowledge is knowledge that is familiar
or easily available in many different sources
• Common knowledge is not arguable or based on
a particular interpretation
- Slide 40: When you use phrases that have
become part of everyday speech
• You don’t need to remind your reader where “all
the world’s a stage” or “life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness” first appeared
- Slide 41: Guidelines
• If typed end to end, the quotations in your 3
page paper should NOT exceed 6 lines of text.
- Slide 42: Source for this information?
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~expos/sources/chap1.htm