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Integrating and Citing Source Texts How can you develop strong skills for integrating sources of information? To strengthen your skills at integrating sources of information, use the following strategies. Strategy 1: Evaluate the reliability of each source. Strategy 2: When integrating multiple sources of information into your writing, use a standard format for citation. 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 1 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Strategy 1: Evaluate the reliability of each source. • Check a Web site’s About page to learn about the group behind the site. Read the mission statement to identify the group’s viewpoint. • Check the credibility of the writer. Find out if he or she has expertise in the area you are researching. • Check the date of the article. Always use current information. • The three letters at the end of a Web site’s domain name can suggest the site’s reliability. The reliability of common domain names are described in the chart on the following screen. 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 2 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Domain Organization Reliability .com for-profit company may be unreliable because they usually focus on selling a product or service .edu educational body often reliable, although pages of individuals reflect their personal perspectives .gov government generally reliable .org nonprofits and other groups reliability varies greatly 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 3 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Directions: Which Web site would have the most reliable information about changes in the Supreme Court’s role since 1950? • an entry on the Supreme Court found on wikipedia.org 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 4 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Directions: Which Web site would have the most reliable information about changes in the Supreme Court’s role since 1950? • an entry on the Supreme Court found on wikipedia.org Wikipedia is widely used, particularly for noncontroversial information. However, since it allows anyone to contribute and it does not list authors, the reliability of any one article is uncertain. 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 5 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Directions: Which Web site would have the most reliable information about changes in the Supreme Court’s role since 1950? • an entry on the Supreme Court found on wikipedia.org Wikipedia is widely used, particularly for noncontroversial information. However, since it allows anyone to contribute and it does not list authors, the reliability of any one article is uncertain. • a chart from the Federal Judicial Center, the educational and research agency for the federal courts (www.fjc.gov) 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 6 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Directions: Which Web site would have the most reliable information about changes in the Supreme Court’s role since 1950? • an entry on the Supreme Court found on wikipedia.org Wikipedia is widely used, particularly for noncontroversial information. However, since it allows anyone to contribute and it does not list authors, the reliability of any one article is uncertain. • a chart from the Federal Judicial Center, the educational and research agency for the federal courts (www.fjc.gov) As a government Web site, this is factual and reliable. 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 7 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Directions: Which Web site would have the most reliable information about changes in the Supreme Court’s role since 1950? • an entry on the Supreme Court found on wikipedia.org Wikipedia is widely used, particularly for noncontroversial information. However, since it allows anyone to contribute and it does not list authors, the reliability of any one article is uncertain. • a chart from the Federal Judicial Center, the educational and research agency for the federal courts (www.fjc.gov) As a government Web site, this is factual and reliable. • a blog about legal issues on a major news network Web site 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 8 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Directions: Which Web site would have the most reliable information about changes in the Supreme Court’s role since 1950? • an entry on the Supreme Court found on wikipedia.org Wikipedia is widely used, particularly for noncontroversial information. However, since it allows anyone to contribute and it does not list authors, the reliability of any one article is uncertain. • a chart from the Federal Judicial Center, the educational and research agency for the federal courts (www.fjc.gov) As a government Web site, this is factual and reliable. • a blog about legal issues on a major news network Web site Reporters attempt to be accurate, but bloggers often combine facts and opinions to advocate a position, so they are less reliable. 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 9 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Directions: Investigate five Web sites that present information about one of the three branches of government or the way power is divided among them. Include a mix of sites, including ones from government agencies, educational institutions, and advocacy organizations. Categorize each one as • highly reliable • fairly reliable • not reliable Write a short explanation of your evaluation. 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 10 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Strategy 2: When integrating multiple sources of information into your writing, use a standard format for citation. When you use various sources of information, you should • reproduce the information accurately • acknowledge the source appropriately The following screens provide examples of how to integrate three commonly used types of information. 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 11 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Whether you get information from printed books, online sources, or personal interviews, you want to use it accurately and acknowledge the source appropriately. The following screens provide examples of how to integrate three commonly used types of information into your writing: • short direct quotations • long direct quotations • paraphrases of content you read 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 12 Integrating and Citing Source Texts The following excerpt is from The American Political Tradition, by Richard Hofstadter, page 12. Hofstadter is analyzing why the writers of the Constitution divided power among multiple branches. The screens following the excerpt will demonstrate how to integrate the information into an essay. 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 13 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Each element [the wealthy and the poor] should be given its own house of the legislature, and over both houses there should be set a capable, strong and impartial executive armed with the veto power. This split assembly would contain within itself an organic check and would be capable of self-control under the governance of the executive. The whole system was to be capped by an independent judiciary. The inevitable tendency of the rich and the poor to plunder each other would be kept in hand. 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 14 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Parenthetical Citations: Identify the source in parentheses by listing the author’s last name (or the organization’s name) and the page number (if available). Example: If your source was page 12 of The American Political Tradition by Richard Hofstadter, your entry in your works cited list would look like this: Hofstadter, Richard. The American Political Tradition. New York: Vintage Books, 2009. Print. Your parenthetical citation in your writing would look like this: (Hofstadter 12) or (12) if the author’s name is mentioned in the text 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 15 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Short Direct Quotations: These are word-for-word quotations that are four lines or shorter. To tell your reader exactly where the direct quotation begins and ends, use quotation marks before and after the passage. Example of Citation of a Short Direct Quotation The writers of the Constitution believed that by dividing the power of the government, “the inevitable tendency of the rich and the poor to plunder each other would be kept in hand” (Hofstadter 12). 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 16 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Long Direct Quotations: If a direction quotation is four lines or longer, set it off as a block quotation. It should be indented one inch from the left margin, double-spaced, and include a reference to the source. Since the text is set off visually, you do not need to use quotation marks around it. Do include a parenthetical source. 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 17 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Example of Citation of a Long Direct Quotation The men who wrote the Constitution divided legislative power among two houses because they hoped they would check each other. This split assembly would contain within itself an organic check and would be capable of self-control under the governance of the executive (Hofstadter 12). This hope has been realized. The House and the Senate often disagree with each other. 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 18 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Paraphrases: These are passages written in your own words that express information that you learned from another source. Do not use quotation marks with these but do include a parenthetical citation. Example of Citation of a Paraphrase Hofstadter suggested that the writers of the Constitution wanted a government strong enough to prevent the poor from oppressing the rich—or vice versa (12). 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 19 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Example of parenthetical citation from a source with no author listed: When citing information from a Web site that does not list an author, use a key word from the title of the article. “The Legislative Branch.” www.whitehouse.gov. Web. 15 Feb. 2013. Congress has the power to authorize borrowing to make up the difference between income from taxes and tarriffs and spending on governmental services (“Legislative Branch”). 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 20 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Statistics: Integrate statistics just as you do text. For example, the chart below shows the number of presidential vetoes in selected terms of Congress. The middle two columns indicate whether the president’s party held a majority in the House and the Senate. President House Majority Senate Majority Number of Vetoes Franklin Roosevelt, 1935–36 Yes Yes 148 Harry Truman, 1947–48 No No 75 Richard Nixon, 1969–71 No No 11 Bill Clinton, 1993–94 Yes Yes 0 Source: The American Presidency Project 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 21 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Here is an example of how the information in this source would be integrated into a sentence. Even though Franklin Roosevelt’s party controlled both the House and the Senate in 1935 and 1936, he vetoed a high number of bills— 148 (The American Presidency Project). 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 22 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Directions: Use the statistics in the following chart to write a statement about the relationship between the number of presidential vetoes and whether the president’s party controlled the House and the Senate. President House Majority Senate Majority Number of Vetoes Franklin Roosevelt, 1935–36 Yes Yes 148 Harry Truman, 1947–48 No No 75 Richard Nixon, 1969–71 No Source: The American Presidency Project. No 11 Bill Clinton, 1993–94 Yes 0 Yes 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 23 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Richard Nixon’s party did not control either the House or the Senate, but he vetoed only 11 bills (The American Presidency Project). 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 24 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Works cited page: A works cited page is a record of all the sources you used to write your paper. It is a separate page included at the end your paper and records information on the author, title, date, and type of each source. Many schools follow a standard format such as MLA or APA styles. Here are some examples of entries on a works cited page using MLA format. Book: Hofstadter, Richard. The American Political Tradition. New York: Vintage Books, 2009. Print. Web page with no author listed: “The Legislative Branch.” www.whitehouse.gov. Web. 15 Feb. 2013. Article: Brenner, Stephen. “Obama Should Know Better on Supreme Court’s Role.” CNN.com. April 3, 2012. Web. 15 Feb 2013. 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 25 Integrating and Citing Source Texts Below is what a works cited page might look like. Notice the entries are in alphabetical order. Works Cited Brenner, Stephen. “Obama Should Know Better on Supreme Court’s Role.” CNN.com. April 3, 2012. Web. 15 Feb 2013. Hofstadter, Richard. The American Political Tradition. New York: Vintage Books, 2009. Print. “The Legislative Branch.” www.whitehouse.gov. Web. 15 Feb. 2013. 9-10 Writing Companion © Perfection Learning® • Reproduction permitted for classroom use only. 26