Curtis / Harris | Using Sources Effectively | Buch | 978-1-032-64376-2 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 198 Seiten, Format (B × H): 210 mm x 280 mm

Curtis / Harris

Using Sources Effectively

Strengthening Your Writing and Avoiding Plagiarism
6. Auflage 2026
ISBN: 978-1-032-64376-2
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd

Strengthening Your Writing and Avoiding Plagiarism

Buch, Englisch, 198 Seiten, Format (B × H): 210 mm x 280 mm

ISBN: 978-1-032-64376-2
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd


The sixth edition of Using Sources Effectively targets the two most prominent problems in current research-paper writing: the increase in unintentional plagiarism and the ineffective use of research source material.

Designed as a textbook for both undergraduate and graduate courses, this book will help every student who uses research in writing. It was written to give students the knowledge and tools you can use to make your research-based writing more powerful and effective. The book includes mini-Research Projects at the end of each chapter to sharpen your research and evaluation skills; a set of practical, useful rhetorical devices to help improve the clarity and impact of your writing; instruction in close reading to help you better grasp what an author is discussing or arguing; and strategies for organizing and positioning your sources to strengthen your central argument. The new edition has been thoroughly updated to cover developments in AI and ChatGPT, critical thinking, and digital developments in relation to social media.

With updated online resources including lecture PowerPoints, an instructor’s guide, a quiz bank, and digital figures, as well as new ‘sidebar’ and learning objective features in the book, this is an essential textbook for students across a range of disciplines who need a guide to research and writing, and who are taking courses on academic writing.

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Zielgruppe


Postgraduate, Undergraduate Advanced, and Undergraduate Core

Weitere Infos & Material


Preface to the Sixth Edition

Chapter 1: The Importance of Using Sources Effectively

1.1 Why Learn to Write Well?

Writing is a Thinking Process

Writing is a Learning Process

Writing Develops Lifelong Skills

1.2 Why Learn Research-Based Writing

Research Writing Allows You to Contribute to the Great Conversation

1.3 Why Use Sources in Papers?

Provide context

Strengthen argument

Interest

New ideas

Current research

Controversies

Exposure to the development of a valid argument

1.4 Why Use Sources Effectively

Instill trust

Aid persuasion

Demonstrates engagement

1.5 Why Cite Them All?

Help reader

Knowledge workers respected

Avoids plagiarism

1.6 Are Sources the Whole Idea?

Your thinking is the star.

Sources need something to support.

Sources need interpreting

Grand Conversation

Chapter 2: Finding, Choosing, and Evaluating Sources

2.1 Understand the assignment

Purpose of the paper

Specific requirements

Audience

2.2 Select the kinds of sources you need

Choose the kind of information you need

Choose sources of appropriate scholarship

Choose appropriate primary and secondary sources

Avoid choosing a source only because you agree with it

Avoid quoting standard dictionaries

2.3Search strategies

Consider the variety of sources (Add Table 2.2 to Table 2.1)

Keep track of your searches

Evaluate sources online

Phrase the search terms effectively

Go beyond the Internet

2.4Using and abusing internet sources

Search for reliable sites

Look deeply into the results

Understand the context of individual pages

Follow the links

Use the invisible Web 2.5Evaluating sources

Expertise

Accuracy

Reliability

Chapter 3: Preparing Your Sources

3.1Collecting sources

Save your sources

Get the full, exact bibliographic information the first time.

Save the way back.

3.2 Keep sources organized

a. Start a bibliography

3.3 Use close reading to understand your sources

What is the purpose of the information?

What is the level of objectivity?

Analyze the argument

Notice analogies and images

Check word meanings for accuracy

So what?

What is each source saying?

3.4 Take careful notes

Use labeling system

Quote exactly

Keep a quotation file

Keep copies of each source with your notes

3.5 Positioning your sources

Purpose or comment indicators

Relationships of sources

3.6 Protect yourself against a false charge of plagiarism

Chapter 4: Quoting Effectively

4.1 Quoting use and abuse

Cautions about quoting

Avoid the fallacy of vicious abstraction

4.2Introductory strategies

Introduce your sources

Use a colon to introduce sentences

Use an introductory phrase

Appropriate tense

Use both set-off and built-in quotations

4.3 Quoting Strategies

Interrupt quotations

Omitting words

Quote phrases

4.3 Punctuating quotations

General conventions

American punctuation

British spelling and grammar

Ellipsis

Square brackets

Chapter 5: Paraphrasing and Summarizing

5.1Paraphrasing

What is a paraphrase?

Why and when to paraphrase

How to paraphrase

Cautions about Paraphrasing

5.2 Summarizing

What is a summary?

Why and when to summarize?

How to summarize

Cautions about paraphrasing 5.3Deciding whether to quote, paraphrase, or summarize 5.4Beware of Thesaurusitis

.

Chapter 6: Avoiding Plagiarism

6.1What is plagiarism?

Intentional plagiarism

Unintentional plagiarism

The fine print

Self-recycling

AI or chatGPT

6.2 Why you should avoid intentional plagiarism

Harms character

Golden rule

Intentional plagiarizers cheat themselves

Never know when will get caught

6.3Guidelines for Citation

What needs to be cited

Citing yourself

Common knowledge

Nothing but citations?

6.3 Myths and facts about citing

The world wide web myth

The fair use myth

The encyclopedia myth

The paraphrased paper myth

The friend’s permission myth

The named source myth

The converted words myth

The tiny theft myth

The background information myth

Chapter 7: Putting It Together

7.1The simple rule: Mark the boundaries

Mark the boundaries of short quotations

Mark the boundaries of long quotations

Marking the boundaries of an unquoted source

7.2 Marking the boundaries in problem cases

Second boundary marker

Marking the boundaries for non-text information

Chapter 8: Effective Use

8.1 Introduce the source thoroughly

Establish credibility of the source

Provide needed background or context

Recommend the source

8.2 Discuss or apply the source

The purpose of a source is not always self-evident

Use interpretive lead-in to explain the source

Be reasonable about the effect of the source

Provide an example to clarify the source’s point

8.3 Blend in your sources

Work your sources into the discussion

Combine quoting with summarizing

One long, many short for persuasion

8.4 Avoid ineffective use

Beware of long quotations

Avoid overusing one source

Begin and end each paragraph with your own words

Be sure citations match the references

8.5 Working with sources that disagree or conflict

Identify the source of disagreement

Criticizing opposing sources

Avoid criticizing a source unfairly

Chapter 9: Editing for Accuracy

9.1 Why cleanup is crucial

9.2Check your spelling

9.3Watch your grammar Comma splice Fused sentences

Sentence fragments

9.4Watch your pronouns

Pronoun agreement

Pronoun reference

Indefinite pronouns Avoid the ambiguous you

9.5 Check for Common Errors

Possessives

Subject-verb agreement

Dangling modifier

Misplaced modifier Word misuse

Affect and effect

Informality

Chapter 10: Jump-Starting Your Writing

10.1Synthesis writing

Definition of synthesis writing

Tapestry versus quilt writing

10.2 Steering wheels

Parataxis and hypotaxis

Transitions

Transitions of logic

Transitions of focus

Transitions of Thought

Keyword repetition

Synonyms

Pronouns and possessive pronouns

Demonstrative pronouns and adjectives

10.3Using flow patters

Patterns with because

Conditional patterns (if-then)

Concession patterns 10.4Using patterns with sources

Use scholarly phrasing

The source supports your position

You agree with the source

The source disagrees with your position

You rebut a source that opposes your view

You respond to a source that presents an incontrovertible objection

The source implies something without stating it

The source makes an unstated assumption

Introducing common knowledge

Introducing conflicting views


Robert A. Harris (PhD, University of California, Riverside) taught English at college and university level for more than 25 years. He has also worked in the area of instructional design. Dr. Harris' other books include The Plagiarism Handbook and Writing with Clarity and Style: A Guide to Rhetorical Devices for Contemporary Writers.

Christie J. Curtis (PhD, Interim Dean, Graduate Studies Chair, Professor, Biola University, La Mirada, California) has been teaching writing and grammar skills for more than 25 years. She currently chairs the committees of many graduate students as they seek to complete their theses. Dr. Curtis is the co-author of the Grammar and Writing Series (Grades 3 – 8), which includes student texts (writing and grammar), student workbooks (writing and grammar), teacher’s guides, and online resources.



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