Paraphrasing And Synthesizing And Outlining An Article

I need all the following on an article about Steriods, I have already highlighted the information just need numbers 1,3 and 4 as well as A and B done together.

1. Synthesize the information (suggested length of 1–2 pages) presented in different sections of the article, pulling individual pieces of information together to create a meaningful idea that is not merely a summary of the article.

2. Highlight a passage (suggested length of 1–2 paragraphs) within the article using bold, italics, underlining, or color to indicate a passage you have selected to paraphrase.

3. Paraphrase the content of the highlighted 1-2 paragraphs from the selected passage so that the information is in your own words.

4. Include all in-text citations and references in APA format.

Note: As in the annotated bibliography task, cite the author, title, and publication information of the article as you would in a reference list. Also, make sure you include an in-text parenthetical citation at the end of the paraphrase section of the assignment.

Note: Please save word-processing documents as *.rtf (Rich Text Format) files.

Note: When bulleted points are present in the task prompt, the level of detail or support called for in the rubric refers to those bulleted points.

Note: For definitions of terms commonly used in the rubric, see the Rubric Terms web link included in the Evaluation Procedures section.

Note: When using outside sources to support ideas and elements in a paper or project, the submission MUST include APA formatted in-text citations with a corresponding reference list for any direct quotes or paraphrasing. It is not necessary to list sources that were consulted if they have not been quoted or paraphrased in the text of the paper or project.

Note: No more than a combined total of 30% of a submission can be directly quoted or closely paraphrased from outside sources, even if cited correctly. For tips on using APA style, please refer to the APA Handout web link included in the APA Guidelines section.

As Well As

Good organization is essential for clear and effective writing. Effective writing is organized around a central idea and keeps readers focused. It is important to have an organizational plan in place before you begin writing so that your writing can follow a logical path and communicate effectively with your audience.

The anchor of your paper will be your thesis statement. The thesis announces your topic and indicates what points you want to make about your topic. The plan for your paper is your map for how you will lead the reader from point to point. Your plan may be a visual organizational plan, a formal outline, or a working outline.

Although the introduction and thesis statement are emphasized below, your writing plan must include a section for the body and conclusion in addition to the introduction. In total, you will include the following three sections in your writing plan:

Introduction: Provide your working thesis statement and preview your main points.

Body: Provide the main points that appear in your thesis. Construct a topic sentence for each of these main points.

Conclusion: Indicate the main concepts you will include in your conclusion. Re-state the thesis and summarize the main points. Do not include new information in your conclusion.

Task:

A. Create a writing plan (e.g., visual organizer, formal outline, working outline) to help you prepare to write your research paper. Use complete sentences throughout

1. Provide an effective working thesis statement in your introduction, previewing your main points.

B. Include all in-text citations and references in APA format.

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