For more on synthesizing information and ideas from sources, see Chapters 5 and 23.
Synthesizing involves presenting ideas and information gleaned from different sources. It can help you see how different sources relate to one another. For ex-
When you synthesize material from different sources, you construct a conversation among your sources, a conversation in which you also participate. Synthesizing contributes most when writers use sources not only to support their ideas but to challenge and extend them as well.
In the following example, the reader uses a variety of sources related to the King passage and brings them together around a central idea. Notice how quotation, paraphrase, and summary are all used.
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Synthesis
When King defends his campaign of nonviolent direct action against the clergymen’s criticism that “our actions, even though peaceful, must be condemned because they precipitate violence” (King excerpt, par. 3), he is using what Vinit Haksar calls Mohandas Gandhi’s “safety-
Find and read two or three sources on the topic of the selection you have been working with, annotating the passages that give you ideas about the topic.
Look for patterns among your sources, possibly supporting or challenging your ideas or those of other sources.
Write a paragraph or more synthesizing your sources, using quotation, summary, and paraphrase to present what they say on the topic.