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Paraphrasing

Paraphrasing. Paraphrasing And your paper Taken Directly from the MLA Handbook for writers of research papers seventh edition.

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Paraphrasing

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  1. Paraphrasing Paraphrasing And your paper Taken Directly from the MLA Handbook for writers of research papers seventh edition Gibaldi, Joseph. “Paraphrasing.” MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. 7th ed. New York: Modern Language Association of America, 2009. MLAhandbook.org. Web. 26 Jan. 2012.

  2. MLA GUIDE: Paraphrase Example Brandon wants to have a content note that describes different kinds of assisted reproductive technology. The report that provides the information for the note is too detailed and technical for his audience, so he decides to paraphrase the source rather than quote from it.

  3. MLA GUIDE: Paraphrase Example Step 1: Brandon begins by writing a description of in vitro fertilization based on his source. Brandon’s first attempt to paraphrase a source.

  4. MLA GUIDE: Paraphrase Example Step 2: He then compares his draft with his source. He sees that he uses many of the same verbs as the source (“extracting,” “fertilizing,” “transferring”); his sentence also follows the logical development of the source sentence. He concludes that his paraphrase resembles the source too closely. He decides to come up with his own wording, seeking also to simplify the description of each technology. While some of the words and phrasing resemble the source, the paraphrase is written in his own voice.

  5. MLA GUIDE: Paraphrase Example Step 3: In his content note, Brandon quotes from a government report. The author of the report is a government department, and the parenthetical citation uses the author’s name. Brandon abbreviates terms listed in chapter 7 of the MLA Handbook. The full publication data for the report can be found in the works-cited list, which is arranged alphabetically.

  6. MLA GUIDE: Paraphrase Example Overview: Step 1: Attempt to paraphrase the information that you would like to use. Step 2: Compare the draft and the source. See how many verbs are repeated and if the paraphrase follows the source too closely. Try to come up with your own wording or simplify the language to use your own voice. Step 3: Add quotations around the direct quotes or words taken from the source and add a citation at the end of the paragraph.

  7. MLA GUIDE: Paraphrase Example Remember: The period does not go at the end of the sentence, it goes at the end of the citation. There is a “good” reason for this quote (Brooks 4). When in doubt…cite it out!!!

  8. MLA GUIDE: Paraphrase Example Questions???

  9. MLA GUIDE: Paraphrase Example

  10. MLA GUIDE: Paraphrase Example

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