Title: Citing Sources
1Citing Sources Integrating Quotations
2When to Use Quotations
- Select quotations carefully for your research
paper - to illustrate or explain an opinion or idea
- to assert a fact
- to provide support for a claim you have made
3How to Integrate Quotations
- Quotations should end with the authors name and
a page number OR margin numbers in
parenthesis. - Socrates states in the Meno As the soul is
immortal . . .there is nothing which it has not
learned (81 d).
4Works Cited Plato Complete Works. (Editor)
John M. Cooper. Cambridge Hackett Company, 1997.
Print.
5- Quotations should end with the authors name and
a page number OR margin numbers in
parenthesis. - In his article on progressive education Manilow
concludes, By the end of our education we, like
Meno, learn not to take what we hear for granted
(Manilow, 220).
6Works Cited Manilow, Aaron. "An Exploration of
Education." Schools Studies in Education 6.2
(2009) 215-221. Education Research Complete.
EBSCO. Web. 15 Apr. 2010.
7How to Integrate Quotations
-
- Setting up quotes with "that does not need a
comma or colon. Notice the punctuation. - In the Meno, it is also mentioned that The
truth about reality is always in our soul (86 b).
8How to Integrate Quotations
- Use brackets to indicate editorial changes
that you make to clarify or improve the
quotation. - According to Manilow, We learn to take those
facts and opinions presented to us and
investigate them rationally (Manilow, 230). -
9Punctuating Quotations
-
- Use an ellipsis . . . to indicate
material omitted from the quotation. -
- At the beginning of the Ethics, Aristotle
states that Every art . . . aims at some good
(I, 5).
10Works Cited Aristotle Selected Works.
(Editor) Hippocrates G. Apostle. Grinnell, Iowa
Peripatetic, 1986. Print.