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  1. (PDF) Paraphrasing Purdue OWL

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  2. owl at purdue apa paraphrasing

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  3. owl purdue and paraphrasing

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  4. Purdue OWL

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  5. Purdue OWL: Paraphrase Exercises

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  6. Purdue Owl: Paraphrasing Exercise by Simone Watson

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VIDEO

  1. Purdue University Owl

  2. How to navigate Purdue’s Library Website

  3. Citations: A Beginning (1/24/24)

  4. Writing and Grading College Papers: For Instructors and Students

  5. Changes to OWL @ Purdue

  6. How do you cite the owl Purdue in APA 7th edition?

COMMENTS

  1. Paraphrasing

    6 Steps to Effective Paraphrasing. Reread the original passage until you understand its full meaning. Set the original aside, and write your paraphrase on a note card. Jot down a few words below your paraphrase to remind you later how you envision using this material. At the top of the note card, write a key word or phrase to indicate the ...

  2. Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing

    Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing. This handout is intended to help you become more comfortable with the uses of and distinctions among quotations, paraphrases, and summaries. This handout compares and contrasts the three terms, gives some pointers, and includes a short excerpt that you can use to practice these skills.

  3. Paraphrase: Write It in Your Own Words

    Six Steps to Effective Paraphrasing. Reread the original passage until you understand its full meaning. Set the original aside, and write your paraphrase on a note card. Jot down a few words below your paraphrase to remind you later how you envision using this material. At the top of the note card, write a key word or phrase to indicate the ...

  4. A Guide to Plagiarism and Paraphrasing

    Paraphrasing: Paraphrasing so closely so that the copy is almost an exact match to the original. Collusion: In group projects, or projects in which you received help, failing to properly attribute the assistance or failure to follow the project's rules. Inaccurate citation: Failing to cite correctly, according to the conventions of your ...

  5. Paraphrasing

    Paraphrasing is summarizing someone else's original ideas or findings in your own words. Use paraphrasing to avoid excessive use of quotations or to combine multiple ideas or findings into a single sentence. Always cite the ideas or findings of others even when paraphrasing them in your own words. It is plagiarism to paraphrase someone else's ...

  6. Paraphrasing

    Step 3: Write the meaning of the passage in your own words (i.e., explain it to yourself). Be sure to give proper credit to the source. Step 4: Check the paraphrase against the original to ensure you haven't accidentally used the same words or phrases and verify that the information you wrote is accurate. Step 5: Set the material aside and work ...

  7. Paraphrasing, Summarizing and Quoting

    This resource provides a sample essay with a summary, paraphrase and a quotation drawn from the sample essay. Paraphrase: Write it in Your Own Words. Also from the OWL at Purdue, this resource walks students through the steps of writing effective paraphrases. Examples of student paraphrases compared against the original text are also included.

  8. How do I paraphrase?

    Paraphrasing helps you understand a resource by interpreting and rewording it in your own voice. It also reduces direct quotations and keeps your voice in your writing. This makes your papers more authentic and easier to read. Like direct quotations, a paraphrase must include a citation giving credit to the original source. Paraphrasing tips:

  9. 13.4: Using Source Text: Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing

    Capturing the source's words exactly as they were written or spoken is an honest way of presenting research. For more on quotation, consult Purdue OWL's series of modules starting with the How to Use Quotation Marks page (Conrey, Pepper, & Brizee, 2021) and ending with their Exercise (2021).

  10. Paraphrasing Exercise

    3. Of the more than 1000 bicycling deaths each year, three-fourths are caused by head injuries. Half of those killed are school-age children. One study concluded that wearing a bike helmet can reduce the risk of head injury by 85 percent. In an accident, a bike helmet absorbs the shock and cushions the head.

  11. How to Quote, Paraphrase, and Summarize

    This guide will help you avoid plagiarism by using quoting, paraphrasing, and summarizing in your research papers. Overview; How to Quote, Paraphrase, and Summarize ... Purdue OWL: Paraphrase: Write It in Your Own Words. YouTube Video: How to Paraphrase. Excelsior Online Writing Lab (OWL): Paraphrasing.

  12. PDF Plagiarism and Paraphrasing

    *Adapted, with changes from Plagiaism.org and O.W.L. at Purdue. Plagiarism and Paraphrasing Citing your sources will help you avoid plagiarism. But what is plagiarism? According to many dictionaries to Plagiarize is: to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one's own to use (another's production) without crediting the source

  13. Research Guides: ENGL 91: Summarize, Paraphrase, and Quote

    Examples and Exercises for Understand Paraphrasing and Summarizing. Practice identifying appropriately paraphrased passages with the University of Arizona's Global Campus Writing Center Paraphrasing Activity. Practice summarizing and paraphrasing with this introductory exercise from the Owl of Purdue, answers provided.

  14. Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing

    These guidelines will help you to avoid unintentional plagiarism. Any quote, paraphrase, or summary needs to be accompanied by an in-text citation that identifies what work you are referring to. This gives credit to the people you have learned from and shows the process of your work. Purdue OWL Guide to Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing.

  15. Paraphrasing

    Purdue OWL provides an excellent example showing quoting, paraphrasing and summarizing in the same paragraph: In his famous and influential work the Interpretation of Dreams, Sigmund Freud argues that dreams are the "royal road to the unconscious" (page #), expressing in coded imagery the dreamer's unfulfilled wishes through a process known as the "dream-work" (page #).

  16. Paraphrasing

    Two unavoidable steps in that process are paraphrasing (changing the language into your own) and summarizing (getting rid of smaller details and leaving only the primary points). These steps are necessary for three reasons. First, if you used the original writer's language without any changes, it limits your own learning; by paraphrasing and ...

  17. Research Guide for Online Communication Students

    From Purdue's OWL. APA Style Help. Overviews, tutorials, and FAQs. Online Writing Lab. Organizing and Managing Citations. Citation management software can help you manage your research and easily organize and format your citations in a wide variety of citation styles. Check out the links below for more information about these useful programs ...

  18. Paraphrasing Tool (Ad-Free and No Sign-up Required)

    AI Paraphrasing Tool. Your words matter, and our paraphrasing tool is designed to ensure you use the right ones. With unlimited Custom modes and 9 predefined modes, Paraphraser lets you rephrase text countless ways. Our product will improve your fluency while also ensuring you have the appropriate vocabulary, tone, and style for any occasion.

  19. Paraphrasing and Summary

    Two unavoidable steps in that process are paraphrasing (changing the language into your own) and summarizing (getting rid of smaller details and leaving only the primary points). These steps are necessary for three reasons. First, if you used the original writer's language without any changes, it limits your own learning; by paraphrasing and ...

  20. PDF PARAPHRASING

    Check out this Purdue OWL page that gives an explanation of the differences between quotations, paraphrases, and summaries - and when to use each. Then, at this other page from Purdue OWL, you can find a good example of summarizing and paraphrasing, as well as what plagiarism looks like. WHY SHOULD I PARAPHRASE?

  21. Research and Citation Resources

    APA Style (7th Edition) These OWL resources will help you learn how to use the American Psychological Association (APA) citation and format style. This section contains resources on in-text citation and the References page, as well as APA sample papers, slide presentations, and the APA classroom poster.

  22. Quoting, paraphrasing, and summarizing

    Associated Press Style- Owl Purdue (Journalism) This link opens in a new window Quoting, paraphrasing, and summarizing Whenever you refer to ideas, information, statistics, images, concepts, facts or anything else that you found from an outside source, you need to let your readers know where you found that information.