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Transform the Outline into the Essay

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

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  1. Transform the Outline into the Essay Mr. Harris-English III I-Search Project

  2. 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)

  3. Remember the descriptive outline?

  4. 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.

  5. Label the section End with the previewing thesis The intro doesn’t have to be long

  6. Remember that each A, B, and C in your outline is a separate paragraph in your essay

  7. 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.

  8. 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;

  9. 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

  10. 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.

  11. It’s like a sandwich. . . Introduce the source and set it up Paraphrase or quote from the source Parenthetically cite and warrant the source

  12. Look back at the outline for point A

  13. Introduce the source

  14. Mention source Make clear why you’re using this source

  15. Present the Source • Paraphrase the relevant information or • Quote briefly

  16. 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.

  17. Make clear why you’re citing the source Identify the source Paraphrase the information Parenthetical citation and warrant

  18. 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

  19. 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.

  20. The second source, the one that I want to quote from

  21. I’m quoting from this page as well

  22. Here’s the second source under the first generalization

  23. 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

  24. Caution: you must cite your sources as directed---using the APA style guide. Failure to do so will automatically fail this essay.

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