This worksheet is designed to help quote, interpret and summarize to avoid plagiarism. These three lighting techniques are often used to support your lighting, to support discussion, or to draw attention.
Quotes, paraphrases, and abstracts are similar, as the author allows you to incorporate the work of another author into your work. However, they differ in their application method.
The quotation is the same as the original quotation in all respects. Use part of the original document and use it in quotation marks ("") on a word by word basis. There is always a text reference after referencing that attributes it to the original source.
Interpretation is to make the paragraph of the original material its own word. As with citations, you must reference the original text and return the information to the original source at the end of the paraphrase section. Interpretation usually means that the part is shorter than the original paragraph.
In summary, the main idea is to use your own words. This means that the essence of the information you are using is rewritten as your own text, but otherwise it is lost. As with the other two, we must also refer to this information at the end.
To use definitions, references, and summaries, be sure to refer to the information in the text. Depending on the quotation style you use, this information can be found on MLA, APA, or Chicago style pages. If you are using a quote, be short and concise and always explain why you will use it later. By carefully referring you can only show to your professor or audience that you have your own idea.
Quotations, interpretations, summaries are various ways to incorporate ideas from other people into homework. The quoted paragraph allows you to share specific words and phrases of other authors, while the definition and summary allows you to show your understanding and interpretation of the text. In any case, please refer to external sources to make your own ideas and your articles more reliable. In addition, correct citations, interpretations, summaries are a good way to avoid plagiarism.
In addition to citations, interpretations, and summaries, the best way to deal with a particular philosopher is not to quote the philosopher's reward directly. So, when should I ask a question, when should I quote? In all cases, you probably need to summarize as long as the specific details of the parameters, such as the specific structure of a particular word or argument, are not important arguments. In both cases of interpretation and summary, be sure to include a reference to the source of your interpretation or summary. In both cases of summarization and interpretation, the easiest way to avoid copying the source is to take notes during writing. You can return at any time and confirm that the memo is correct before submitting the final copy. Please be very careful to change the language; structure of the sentence must be changed to avoid plagiarism
ยท Return a reference, interpret and summarize the lecture note and explain the selected paragraph by group or class. Or use the paragraph of the article you just read on the course. In the final interpretation, ask the students to discuss word selection, composition, phrase and sentence cutting. "The world's population has tripled in the 20th century, but the use of renewable water resources has increased by a factor of 6. In the next 50 years the world's population will increase by an additional 40 to 50%. Industrialization and Urbanization - Demand for water increases and seriously affects the environment.