Senior High School – Pangasinan State University, Urdaneta City – 21st Century Literature
Wednesday, January 31, 2018
Assignment #4
Paraphrasing
It includes taking an arrangement of realities or feelings and revamping them. While rewording, it is essential to keep the first importance and to display it in another frame. Fundamentally, you are essentially composing something in your own particular words that communicates the first thought. (http://examples.yourdictionary.com/examples-of-paraphrasing.html)
Summarizing
It is a union of the key thoughts of a bit of composing, restated in your own words – i.e., paraphrased. You may compose a synopsis as a remain solitary task or as a feature of a more drawn out paper. Whenever you summarize, you should be careful not to copy the correct wording of the first source. (https://integrity.mit.edu/handbook/academic-writing/summarizing)
Thesis Statement
It is the sentence that expresses the fundamental thought of a composition task and helps control the thoughts inside the paper. It isn't only a subject. It frequently mirrors a supposition or judgment that an author has made about a perusing or individual experience.
(https://gustavus.edu/writingcenter/handoutdocs/thesis_statements.php)
Outlining
Once a topic has been picked, thoughts have been produced through conceptualizing and free composition, and a working thesis has been created, the last step a writer can perform in the prewriting stage is creating an outline. An outline enables an writer to arrange the primary focuses, to sort out the passages into a request that bodes well, and to ensure that each section/thought can be completely created. Essentially, an outline keeps an author from stalling out when playing out the real written work of the article.
An outline gives a guide of where to run with the paper. A well-developed outline will show what the thesis of the essay is, what the main idea of each body paragraph is, and the evidence/support that will be offered in each paragraph to substantiate the main points.
(https://www.aims.edu/student/online-writing-lab/process/outline)
Citation
A citation is a a method for offering credit to people for their imaginative and scholarly works that you used to help your exploration. It can also be used to locate particular sources and combat plagiarism. Typically, a citation can include the author's name, date, location of the publishing company, journal title, or DOI (Digital Object Identifer).
A citation style dictates the information that is necessary for a citation and how the information is ordered, as well as punctuation and other formatting.
(http://pitt.libguides.com/citationhelp)
• MLA: Parenthetical citation in MLA style must include at least the name of the author. Page number should be also included if a specific page is cited, and a short title if more than one work by the same author is listed in the Works Cited page at the end of the paper.
• APA: It's very similar to MLA. APA in-text citation must include at least the author's name, the year of publication (with letters for multiple sources published the same year [1989a, 1989b]), and the page number, designated as p. 123. APA uses more commas to separate blocks of information than MLA.
(https://sun.iwu.edu/~jhaefner/WC200XSP17/mla&apa.html)
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