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Transform the Outline into the Essay. Mr. Harris-English III I-Search Project. Review of the SIX Parts of the I-Search Essay. Search question—the introduction (Part I) Search process-the description of how you found your sources (Part II)
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Transform the Outline into the Essay Mr. Harris-English III I-Search Project
Review of the SIX Parts of the I-Search Essay • Search question—the introduction (Part I) • Search process-the description of how you found your sources (Part II) • What I Learned—the presentation of your sources (Part III-The Story of My Search) • What I Discovered (What this means to me)—the conclusion (Part IV) • Works Cited (Part V) • Appendix (Part VI)
Let’s follow that outline through the development of that section of the essay: • First, you need to label the section; • Then, write a brief introduction; • Finally, end the introduction with the thesis/preview from your outline.
Label the section End with the previewing thesis The intro doesn’t have to be long
Remember that each A, B, and C in your outline is a separate paragraph in your essay
Writing the paragraph from the outline: • Start with your topic sentence; • Then add your first generalization; • Use more than one sentence to talk about your generalization before you present your first secondary source.
Presenting the Source • In a research paper, your purpose is to present a variety of sources in support of your own ideas or organization; • Thus, you want to avoid just cutting and pasting from your secondary sources;
You do, however, have to make sure that the reader can tell • What source you’re using; • When your source begins and ends; and • The difference between the voice of the source and your own voice
Citing Your Source:There are Three Steps • Introduce your source by • Mentioning the author’s name or the article’s title; • Making clear why you’re citing this source; • Quote or paraphrase from the source; • Conclude the source citation by • Including a parenthetical end citation; and • Warranting the source.
It’s like a sandwich. . . Introduce the source and set it up Paraphrase or quote from the source Parenthetically cite and warrant the source
Mention source Make clear why you’re using this source
Present the Source • Paraphrase the relevant information or • Quote briefly
How to Paraphrase • Just pick out the relevant information from your source; • Put it in your own words; • Begin the citation by mentioning the source; • End it with a parenthetical citation and a warrant.
Make clear why you’re citing the source Identify the source Paraphrase the information Parenthetical citation and warrant
How to Quote • Quote sparingly • Usually it’s best to just paraphrase • Quote briefly • Take just a sentence or phrase from the source • Quote in context of your own writing • Build the quotation into the grammar of your own sentence
Using Quotation Marks • Open with quotation marks; • Reproduce the exact wording of the source within the quotation marks; • Close the quotation marks; • Insert the parenthetical end citation; • Insert the appropriate punctuation mark for the sentence after the parenthetical citation.
To finish out the paragraph. . . • Work through the remaining generalizations and secondary sources; • Conclude the paragraph with an overall summing up sentence; • Then repeat the process for points B and C
Caution: you must cite your sources as directed---using the APA style guide. Failure to do so will automatically fail this essay.