RULES OF DOCUMENTATION IN ACADEMIC WRITING
See "How
to Format your References" for more information.
The basic rule is that
- writers must put quotation marks around all materials
copied directly from a source and
- must identify -- in a footnote or bibliography
or in parentheses in the text -- the source of all statistics,
unique information and ideas, whether quoted directly or paraphrased,
with a full citation, including page numbers.
Some student writing problems show up as errors or
as patterns of avoidance. Some students, for example, never quote
directly because they are unsure how to use quotation marks. Others
quote everything because they dont know whether paraphrasing
requires quotation marks or a footnote.
Some students need practice in recognizing differences among direct quotation,
indirect quotation, and paraphrase. Here are some common patterns (a footnote
number would be required after each of these sentences):
He said "My investigations have revealed that
the bureau is a thicket of deceit."
He said that his investigations had revealed the bureau to be a "thicket
of deceit."
He said that his investigations had revealed widespread dishonesty in the
bureau.
There is widespread dishonesty in the bureau, reports Maxwell.
The general rule is: "Quote directly only
when the exact words of the source are important for some special
reason." Students must combat their tendency to quote because
they think that the prose style of the original is better than
anything they could write, or because they dont understand
the quotation well enough to paraphrase it, or because its
just easier to copy than to state an idea in their own words.
Guidelines for Use of Research Material
- Whenever you use another
writers exact words, or state another authors idea
in your own words, or use facts from a source (unless these
facts are so common as to be part of the generally accepted
store of knowledge in the field), you must give credit to that
other author and tell the reader where the information or idea
came from. Note that I said you must give credit even
when you use your own words. This may be contrary to some habits
youve developed in high school, but it is very important,
because not to do so is plagiarism, which has serious consequences.
It is a kind of stealing -- stealing someones idea or
the data someone has collected, without giving that person
credit.
- In academics, the basic forms used to give credit
to another author and to tell the reader where the information
came from are the footnote, or the in-text citation, and the
bibliography.
- It is easy to get "captured" by another
authors words or organization and to end up using too much
quoted material, or too many ideas from other authors, in a paper.
To avoid this problem, you must establish your own purpose, your
own plan or outline, and your own point of view. You must also
be sure about who your audience is. Then search for the facts
or ideas you need to support your own goals. That way, material
from sources will fit into your own plan, not be your plan.
- When sources contradict one another, or when there
are several places from which to get information or ideas, you
must evaluate the worth of the sources and use the most reliable.
Consider such factors as the date of the material, the reliability
of the person or journal or newspaper reporting it, the likelihood
of a persons being knowledgeable about, or present at,
a reported event, and so on. The least reliable sources are encyclopedias,
secondary compilations of documents, quotations of quotations,
prefaces, introductory surveys, or chapters in broad, general
texts.
More reliable, as a rule, are original documents, firsthand accounts, the
work of original researchers or thinkers or compilers who first printed an
idea or a research report or a statistical table, and people who are experts
in a specialized field, not writers of some compilation such as an introductory
textbook or a popular magazine account. Common sense will often help you
decide which sources to use (whom would you call as witness in a trial --
the person who saw the accident or the person only heard about it?).
If you need help evaluating the worth of a book, check the Book
Review Digest to see how others have viewed it. If you need help selecting
from several possible sources, see whether there is a recently published
selected bibliography or review article. The word "selected" tells
you that someone who knows the field more or less well has selected from
many possible books and articles the ones he or she considers best for a
certain purpose (make sure you know what that purpose was; if it was different
from yours, that persons choice may not be useful to you). If you are
unsure how to evaluate the worth of a written source, ask for help at the
desk of the reference librarian; dont be afraid to ask for help.
- Many students quote too much. The guide is this:
use direct quotation only when the precise words of the author
are needed to justify your interpretation, or when those words
are too exquisite to be missed. Avoid long, dull quotations,
especially of material considered common knowledge. Consider
paraphrasing (saying in your own words) most of a long passage,
even if you do want to quote some of it. Footnote numbers appear
at the end of quotations or citations, or, if the cited material
is more than a paragraph, at the end of each paragraph ( so the
reader doesnt get lost).
- When you quote material directly, you have an
additional responsibility besides the footnote. If the quotation
is shorter than four lines, use quotation marks and just include
it right in your paragraph, making sure that it fits in smoothly.
Remember to include both sets of quotation marks, at the beginning
and at the end of the quote. If it is longer than four lines,
then use no quotation marks. Instead, indent the whole thing
five spaces and single-space it. The spacing serves instead of
quotation marks to tell the reader that the passage is quoted.
- Keep exact notes so that you know exactly where
you got your information. If you found the information on-line
through your computer, be sure to note date, medium, and location.
The goal of references is for someone else to be able to go exactly
to where you found the information and verify it.
_____
Adapted by Susan Chizeck from: Barbara Walvoord, Helping
Students Write Well, NY: Modern Language Assn., 1986
pp. 192-194.
See "How to Format
your References" for more information. |