Citing evidence is an
essential skill for successful writing. There are three types of citations
including summary and paraphrasing but the most effective the ability to
integrate direct quotations as evidence for a claim. There are many steps for effectively
integrating quotations. In general the quotation should be introduced, stated
and explained. Here is a sheet with some reminders and examples for the
commentary portion of a paragraph.
A good template for a paragraph would be:
Thesis (topic sentence) -
remember there is only a thesis in the intro, otherwise it is a topic sentence
Context
Transition (introduce your quotation)
Quotation
The sentence after the quotation usually
directly refers to a key phrase from the quotation for further clarification
Commentary
HOW do your examples prove your point?
WHY are they important examples?
(Usually evidence consists of three examples, you
may need extra commentary)
Conclusion
The following
suggestions are key pointers to help you transform your ideas from opinion to
claim. Reminder: a claim is well supported opinion.
1. Introduce your
quotations. A quotation should
never suddenly appear out of nowhere. Some kind of information about the
quotation is needed. Name the author, give his or her credentials, identify the
source, and give a summary.
In
the article titled “Why students don’t do their homework” by Robert Celli, the
educator claims that Students are not lazy, but are simply often confused about
what is the purpose of their assignment, which corresponds with my findings as
well.
2. Sate your quotation
(or citation).
As Celli asserts, “Explanations of
homework assignments are important if anything other than a mechanical or
begrudging response is expected” (11).
3. Discuss your
quotations by amplifying the key phrase. When possible, use
the key words or phrases from the quotation to explain what you mean. The
sentence after the quotations should use the key phrase(s) in your sentence to
amplify the meaning.
Celli seems to be saying
that if a “clear explanation of homework” is not given then students will think
the assignment is busy work, or meaningless and they will not give full effort,
rather they will “begrudgingly” just do work. If a teacher wants the students
to give their best effort, than the purpose of the assignment, the discreet
skill being practiced, should be explicitly clear so the student is aware of
what they are learning and how it will help them.
4. Explain HOW the quotation
supports your claim, and WHY that evidence is important. This is the key to
your analysis (commentary). How clearly and concisely can you articulate meaning
is the key to your response.
Clearly, if the purpose of the assignment is not clear, students
are not likely to give best effort and will simply do the assignment as fast as
they can to get it done. Somehow students need to know that it is most
important to learn the skill, rather than simply do the work.
It is often useful to
apply some interpretive academic phrasing after a quotation, to show the reader
that you are explaining the quotation and that it supports your argument:
- Here we see that
- This statement shows
- Clearly
- The assertion
- We can conclude from this that
- This tells us that
- From this we can understand that
- If we are to understand from this comment that
- This seems to show
- The suggestion is
5. Other Reminders:
Use some variety in
introducing quotations.
Remember to think about
what the author is doing and use verbs to explain their purpose as an
alternative to using “says” all the time.
- says
- writes
- observes
- notes
- remarks
- adds
- declares
- informs us
- alleges
- claims
- states
- comments
- thinks
- affirms
- asserts
- explains
- argues
- suggests
Sometimes leave out some words to condense the quotation. Mid-sentence ellipses use three
spaced dots.
Example
text:
The surf on the beach at Mazatlan beat against the shore.
The surf on the beach at Mazatlan beat against the shore.
Your
quotation:
Smith says of his wave watching, "The surf . . . beat against the shore" (Jones 788).
Smith says of his wave watching, "The surf . . . beat against the shore" (Jones 788).
Transition words help clue the reader that new
points are being made.
·
in addition
·
of course
·
meanwhile
·
hence
·
in contrast
·
for instance
·
for example
·
in other words
·
as a result
·
otherwise
·
similarly
·
certainly
·
indeed
·
consequently
·
therefore
Long Quotations
Quotations that are longer
than 3 lines get a different format. Here is the citation from the OWL:
For quotations that
extend to more than four lines of verse or three lines of prose, place
quotations in a free-standing block of text and omit quotation marks. Start the
quotation on a new line, with the entire quote indented one inch from the left margin; maintain
double-spacing. Only indent the first line of the quotation by an additional
quarter inch if you are citing multiple paragraphs. Your parenthetical citation
should come after the closing punctuation mark.
For example, when citing
more than four lines of prose, use the following examples:
Nelly Dean treats Heathcliff poorly and dehumanizes him throughout
her narration:
They entirely refused to have it in bed with them, or even in
their room, and I had no more sense, so, I put it on the landing of the stairs,
hoping it would be gone on the morrow. By chance, or else attracted by hearing
his voice, it crept to Mr. Earnshaw's door, and there he found it on quitting
his chamber. Inquiries were made as to how it got there; I was obliged to
confess, and in recompense for my cowardice and inhumanity was sent out of the
house. (Bronte 78)
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