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Writing Skills: Citation 291 Views


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Description:

Quoting, paraphrasing, summarizing, making your own argument, finding sources...yeah. We know how to get a party started.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:02

Citation... (mumbling)

00:10

(mumbling) All right...

00:17

Well, what's that's the first thing you want to do every time your teacher assigns a

00:22

research paper? Groan and throw a temper tantrum? Run and hide? Head

00:26

to the library to get a jump start on the project? Well, most likely, you fall

00:29

into one of those first two student types, so clearly, you're not alone in

00:33

your agony. Research papers don't have to be stomach-churning, though. Leave

00:38

that to roller coasters and new, wild flavors of potato chips. Well, when you know how to

00:42

properly cite research, the process of researching can be easy as pie. Mmm, delicious

00:48

pie... okay, citation. (mumbling)

00:52

(mumble-reading) Uh, this kind of

00:56

citation? The one you get for going 115 in a 15? Yeah, no, don't do that. Bad

01:01

idea. Citation is also about using other people's work in your own research papers.

01:06

That's a real thing, and as long as you do it correctly, it's even legal.

01:10

It's like someone else came up with the brilliant thoughts and you just get to

01:14

use them. Okay, well, sort of like that there are a lot of rules and

01:16

restrictions when it comes to citing other people's work. As I said, you can

01:20

totally use other people's work when writing your own speeches, research

01:24

papers, or even in poetry or other creative writing. The important part

01:28

about using others' work though, is making 100% sure that you're citing it.

01:32

Well, there are three basic methods of citation: quoting, paraphrasing, and/or

01:38

creating your very own argument. Well, quoting is the most basic but probably

01:42

also the one people screw up the most often when you quote a source that means

01:46

not only are you using exactly what's being said in the source itself but

01:51

you're citing or attributing it correctly well pretend you're going to

01:55

write a paper about gorillas you know that they're pretty awesome creatures

01:58

but you don't know exactly where on earth they live so you need a source to

02:03

help fill in this information gap you head to the library or hop online

02:07

whatever and find a great resource from national gorilla quarterly that tells

02:12

you everything you've ever wanted to know about

02:14

gorillas and even a little bit more in the TMI zone okay anyway this source

02:19

gives you the perfect quote that would just really make your research paper pop

02:24

and you'll want to use it all right well what do you do well you use it with the

02:28

correct citation pretend this was the entire passage that you found if you're

02:34

going too far in trying to jungle in La Canada Grill Lisbon spawn in Uganda

02:38

Rwanda traveling across your path all right

02:42

you don't need all of that info it's too much and strays off course from the main

02:46

point you're talking about where the gorillas can be found so you'd pull only

02:50

this sentence from the passage right here eastern lowland gorillas I'm

02:53

spawning again of a wild mountain gorillas in the nation and you'd work it

02:57

into what you've personally written in your research paper you don't want to

03:01

just throw random quotes into your papers to a little amateur mistake

03:05

instead work to frame the quotes you pull from other sources like so there

03:11

are two main kinds of really eastern lowland gorillas found in their borders

03:15

into nations and then see the unquote there yeah see what I did there I set up

03:19

the quote with a sentence that frames it within the context of the paper that way

03:23

my writing and the quote I picked I'll just you know flow together now in order

03:27

to make sure you've correctly cited the information you've got to use quotation

03:31

marks around the info you stick into your papers this rule is a must

03:35

no questions asked if you don't follow it you could be violating copyright laws

03:39

and might be accused of plagiarism ie stealing someone else's work and

03:43

attempting to pass it off as your own it's pretty much the cardinal sin of

03:47

paper writing if you plagiarize even part of a paper and get caught there are

03:52

serious consequences like you might fail the class be kicked out of school you

03:56

could even be sued for copyright infringement or using copyrighted work

04:00

without citing it but it's really easy to avoid all of this scary stress and

04:05

frustration just cite your sources that's literally it you're pretty much

04:09

free to use whatever you want copyright it or not as long as you give the author

04:13

their due credit come on I mean wouldn't we want others to do the same for you if

04:17

you wrote a really awesome book and someone decided to steal parts of it and

04:21

claim that they were the one who wrote it only you'd probably be pretty P owed

04:25

and with good reason it's why

04:27

copyright laws exist and why we make sure to cite our resources in our papers

04:32

alright last step in the quoting process is to cite the source where you've got

04:36

the info going back to our gorilla example let's say you found a quote you

04:40

used in an article written by Sally schmooper on page 97 of national gorilla

04:46

quarterly you're going to need to include what's called an in-text

04:50

citation it's called an in-text citation because it's included in the text of the

04:55

paper itself now sometimes you'll have to do in-text citations and a complete

04:59

list of all of your references at the end of the paper but that's another

05:03

topic for another day back to Sally and the gorillas using the example from

05:07

above here's how we write our in-text citation for Sally schmooper there are

05:11

two main types of gorillas that may be found in a quote in tournaments and

05:14

integrated on a board and you know quote schmooper 97 say we did that notice the

05:20

parenthetical citation comes after the quotation marks since it wasn't part of

05:25

the actual quote then the period comes at the end of the sentences periods tend

05:29

to do and we're done that's it another way of using sources in your paper is

05:35

called era phrasing unlike quoting which is just taking someone else's work

05:39

plopping it into yours and throwing quotation marks around the whole shebang

05:43

paraphrasing is a little different when you paraphrase someone else's work you

05:46

rewrite it in your own words but keep the meaning the same as the original

05:51

imagine you're writing a love poem about the object of your desire your bay when

05:57

you've been dreaming about all your teenage life well you know your writing

06:00

skills are taught not but you want to up the ante by throwing in a reference by

06:04

some seasoned love expert well you find this amazing quote there is no remedy

06:10

for love but to love more the Rove 44 hey that runs that's just back it all

06:15

right well you're swooning you want to paraphrase this so you'll rewrite it I

06:19

know you were going through a rough breakup but you can get over it by

06:23

loving again the row 44 yet now okay well your attempt might not sound quite

06:28

as eloquent as the original but it works as a paraphrase because you kept the

06:32

meaning intact and even though you switched it up and

06:35

puts quote in your own words you've still got to give credit to Thoreau he

06:39

came up with the s and after all it might sound tricky to know

06:43

when to paraphrase something when in doubt cite it if you have any inkling

06:47

that you might be copying someone else's work and not giving them credit just

06:52

cite it you know like Nike the third method of citation is creating your own

06:56

argument you'll use this method when you write argumentative essays in particular

07:00

to present a counterpoint to the point you're trying to make well let's say

07:04

you're arguing that school lunches should always include pizza no matter

07:08

what no arguments there right well not so fast in order to construct a

07:12

compelling argument you've got to consider what the opposition has to say

07:15

in this case the opposition says despite rumors of pizzas its own food group is

07:20

50 no true tomato sauce is not because of those people who know did you dip

07:24

harsh but a decent argument in your paper you're going to create your own

07:28

argument using this info like so pizzas not only delicious but it's good for you

07:33

according to pizza haters and unmanned Tomatoes Oh blah I all this may be true

07:38

there's no law requiring both have nutritional value but it doesn't hurt

07:41

your help all right well see what happened there

07:43

we framed the quote by using our own information about it before the quote we

07:47

mentioned the author's name which is totally legit but we can't leave out the

07:51

page where we got the info so it goes after the quote there are tons of

07:56

specifics when it comes to citations and if you can't remember them all well

08:00

don't sweat it there are references upon references upon references for you to

08:03

use to get all the rules down there are different citation styles depending on

08:07

what discipline you're writing you for liberal arts and humanities courses like

08:12

this one we use something called MLA style MLA stands for Modern Language

08:17

Association the reason for using any sort of citation style at all is because

08:21

it provides a format for writing papers all papers written in the format will be

08:25

consistent and easy for the reader to understand which is important in the

08:30

world of academics where people are reading and writing papers all the time

08:33

well seriously is there anything else almost it's good to get up close and

08:37

personal with the MLA format and it's the one you'll primarily use to write

08:42

your papers in English and language arts courses okay now in a nutshell that's it

08:46

the basics of citation the most important thing to take away from this

08:49

video is that citation is not only important it's necessary

08:53

if you want to write credible papers stay in school and you know generally

08:58

stay out of jail

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