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Westchester Community College Harold L. Drimmer Library

Prof. Craft - English 101 - Humor and Gender: Using Your Sources

Quoting Your Sources

You will need to incorporate information from books, articles, websites and other sources into your paper to support your ideas. There are two main ways to do so, through Direct Quotation or Paraphrase (Indirect Quotation). Both require the original source be given credit through an In-Text (or Parenthetical) Citation at the end of the passage. See the How to Cite tab to find out how to create In-Text/Parenthetical Citations in the format required for your assignment. 

Information that is so well known, referred to as Common Knowledge, does not require any citation. See below for definitions and examples of each.

Before you use any material in your paper be sure to:

  • Read the source completely.
  • Re-read it to be sure you understand what the author is trying to say.
  • Make sure it supports the point or argument you are trying to make.
  • Write down or print out the complete citation for the source, so that you can cite it properly.

Direct Quotes, Paraphrasing, and Common Knowledge

Direct Quotation is copying your source exactly the way you found it - word for word.

Use Direct Quotes sparingly in your paper - most of your information should be paraphrased.

Show your reader you are quoting directly from your source by putting the quoted passage within quotation marks and following it by an In-Text Citation. The quoted passage should be integrated with your own thoughts and words.


Direct Quote - Example (MLA format)

In Norse mythology those who are killled in battle go to Valhalla, or "Hall of the Slain," where "they feast every night, while by day they fight to the death, reviving at nightfall to feast together once more" (Simpson 973).

Simpson, Jacqueline. "Valhalla." Encyclopedia of Death & the Human Experience, edited by Clifton D. Bryant and Dennis L. Peck, vol. 2, SAGE Publications, 2009, pp. 973-974. Gale Virtual Reference Library, http://lib-proxy.sunywcc.edu:2634/apps/doc/CX3201700336/GVRL?u=valh61524&sid=GVRL&xid=f826a135.

Before You Hand Your Paper In:

Inadvertent plagiarism issues can be a result of poor time management and rushing to finish a paper. Leaving enough time to go over your work - or to ask someone else to look at it - can help avoid unnecessary charges of plagiarism.

  • Do you have in-text/parenthetical citations and a works cited page citation for each of the sources that require it?
  • If you have quoted word-for-word (Direct Quote) from a source, have you put the phrase(s) in quotation marks to mark those words as not your own?
  • Do all the quotes and paraphrased passages support the point(s) you are trying to make?
  • Have you used Direct Quotes sparingly and paraphrased most of your source material? The majority of the paper should be in your own words.

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