What is Paraphrasing?
Paraphrasing is when you present information (ideas, opinions, concepts, theories, facts, etc.) that you found from a source and incorporate that information into your own paper, presentation, or project. When you paraphrase, you are not just re-arranging the original wording or swapping out a few words with synonyms. To correctly paraphrase, you should re-write the information in your own words, which requires you to understand that information and connect it with your own ideas and with information from your other sources.
We call this process of understanding and connecting information synthesis. It can be difficult to synthesize information but it is an important part of the research and writing process. Synthesis makes your arguments, positions, research, etc. stronger and helps organize your writing.
To correctly paraphrase, you should...
- Present information accurately. Make sure you have accurately represented and reported the ideas, opinions, facts, etc. of your source
- Use your own words. Don't just re-arrange words/phrases or swap out words for synonyms. Synthesize the information - connect it your own ideas, your other sources, your argument/research/etc.
- Give credit to (cite) the original source. Even when paraphrasing, you need to cite the original source because you are not the original creator of that information.