12f Synthesizing sources

12fSynthesizing sources

Contents:

Storyboards on synthesis

When you read and interpret a source—for example, when you consider its purpose and relevance, its author’s credentials, its accuracy, and the kind of argument it is making—you are analyzing the source. Analysis requires you to take apart something complex (such as an article in a scholarly journal) and look closely at the parts to understand the whole better. For academic writing you also need to synthesize—group similar pieces of information together and look for patterns—so you can put your sources (and your own knowledge and experience) together in an original argument. Synthesis is the flip side of analysis: you already understand the parts, so your job is to assemble them into a new whole.

To synthesize sources for a research project, try the following tips:

Using sources effectively can pose challenges (12b). Even after you have evaluated a source, take time to look at how well it works in your specific situation. And if you change the focus of your work after you have begun doing research, be especially careful to check whether your sources still fit.

A student’s synthesis project

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Caroline Warner’s full research-based essay on “Hydration and Sports Drinks in Competitive Cycling” appears here. In this excerpt, she identifies important ideas from her research on hydration for athletes, formulates a position, and supports her argument, effectively synthesizing her sources. Go here to read and analyze Caroline Warner's work and answer questions about synthesizing sources. (Photo © Caroline Warner)

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Note the way Caroline identifies important information from a journal and expands on the significance of the information in her discussion of sources from two Web sites for cyclists and a personal interview. All of these sources are synthesized to support her own claim that continuous hydration with sports drinks is the best way for cyclists to combat the threat of dehydration. (For more on synthesizing sources, see Chapter 13 and 15d.)