This article was co-authored by Noah Taxis
and by wikiHow staff writer, Jennifer Mueller, JD
. Noah Taxis is an English Teacher based in San Francisco, California. He has taught as a credentialed teacher for over four years: first at Mountain View High School as a 9th- and 11th-grade English Teacher, then at UISA (Ukiah Independent Study Academy) as a Middle School Independent Study Teacher. He is now a high school English teacher at St. Ignatius College Preparatory School in San Francisco. He received an MA in Secondary Education and Teaching from Stanford University’s Graduate School of Education. He also received an MA in Comparative and World Literature from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and a BA in International Literary & Visual Studies and English from Tufts University.
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Using a journal article in your essay can add to your credibility and make your points more persuasive. When you introduce an article to your readers, you help them understand why you're using it as a source. We've gathered a number of different ways you can introduce the journal article and transition between your thoughts and those of the other author. Pick the one that works best for you and your personal writing style.
Steps
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This option is best if either the article or the author is well-known. When you're using a journal article that is frequently cited in your field or is written by a well-established authority, introduce it with simply the title and the author. Your readers will understand why you're using that article because it's widely considered an authority.
- For example, you might write: "Albus Dumbledore describes the origin of the four Hogwarts houses in his article 'Separating Hogwarts Fact and Fiction.'"
- Put the title of the article in double-quotation marks in your text. [1] X Research source
- If you're quoting directly from the source, include the author's full name the first time you quote them. [2] X Research source
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Use a summary if you only need the main point of the article. Read the entire article so you can provide a complete summary of the point of the article in a sentence or two. Then, introduce the article with your summary of what it's about. [3] X Research source
- For example, you might write: "The history of Hogwarts makes clear that the houses were never intended to be seen as 'good' or 'evil.' Rather, each house emphasizes and nurtures specific traits students have—how they use those traits is up to them."
- Paraphrasing from the article is similar to summarizing. However, when you summarize, you're covering the entire article in a sentence or two. A paraphrase typically only covers a small portion of the article.
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Explain how the author or the article is important with background info. Discuss the background of the source to demonstrate the author's expertise in the field or why their conclusions are reliable. List the author's credentials if they relate to the topic of your essay—they'll give your writing more credibility.
- For example, you might write: "Professor Slughorn was one of the longest-serving teachers at Hogwarts, schooling generations of students in potions until his retirement."
- You might also include some background if the author of the article is controversial or the article's conclusions have been seriously questioned. If you're doing this, go on to explain why you're using the article in your essay.
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Try this if you need to justify using the source. If an article doesn't seem obviously related to your essay, let your readers know exactly how the article addresses the point you're making. You can also distinguish any part of the article that isn't relevant.
- For example, you might write: "Although this essay doesn't discuss defenses against the dark arts, Gilderoy Lockhart's article provides an example of how you can't learn anything by plagiarizing the work of others."
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This is a good option if the article supports your own ideas. Using a published article to support your own ideas gives what you're saying more credibility. With this option, you might also lean on the expertise of the author of the article to give you even more support.
- For example, you might write: "This article demonstrates broad support for the idea that Hogwarts should continue to sort students into four houses."
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Go with signals to make a simple transition. Signal phrases let your readers know that you're no longer talking about your own ideas, but rather the ideas expressed in the article. Some signals you can use include "argues," "notes," "observes," "addresses," confirms," and "contends."
- For example, you might write: "McGonagall argues that Slytherin House should be disbanded after the Battle of Hogwarts."
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Include limitations if the source is an opposing viewpoint. Start by telling your readers how the author went wrong or what their analysis was missing. You can then move on to explain how your argument or position clearly refutes the conclusion the author reached.
- For example, you might write: "While McGonagall makes a compelling argument that Slytherin House should be disbanded, she was biased by her experiences. In this essay, I will show that the personality traits emphasized by Slytherin are positive traits that can be used for good."
Expert Q&A
Tips
- Remember to include an in-text citation for the source if required by your citation guide. You'll also need an entry for the source in your reference list at the end of your paper.Thanks
- In an academic essay, you typically introduce a journal article in the first sentence of a paragraph. Then, use the sentences that follow to show how the material from the article relates to the rest of your essay.Thanks
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Expert Interview
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