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Hidden Figures

Margot lee shetterly.

paraphrasing and summarizing a nonfiction text hidden figures quizlet

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Hidden Figures

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67 pages • 2 hours read

A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.

Introduction

Before Reading

During Reading

After Reading

Discussion/analysis prompt.

Throughout Hidden Figures, Shetterly points to examples of women’s strength and perseverance and how these traits contributed to their success at NASA. She also foregrounds, however, the fact that many moments of growth in the space race took place at the same time that the civil rights movement was working to advocate for racial equality. Considering your overall reading experience, what is the effect of this comparison? To what extent does the text serve as a dual narrative? Utilize text details in supporting your points. It may be helpful to reflect on the following questions in formulating your response:

  • What does bringing the narrative of the civil rights movement into the history of the space race show us about American society?
  • What can we learn about the effects of World War II on gender and racial dynamics in the United States?
  • What understanding might we now have of the views that the space race was a waste of resources?
  • Why might the women’s contributions have gone unacknowledged for so long? What conclusions can be drawn in considering examples of women and people of color whose major scientific advances garner attention only decades later?

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By Margot Lee Shetterly

Hidden Figures: Young Readers Edition

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Hidden Figures Nonfiction Reading FULL Unit with Literary Analysis

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Description

Two units in one!

In this unit, you will get a nonfiction reading unit on the nonfiction biography Hidden Figures AND a compare/contrast literary analysis essay.

Materials include:

  • A unit outline with a scope and sequence
  • Skills-based lesson slide decks
  • Student activities
  • Formative and summative assessment rubrics
  • Sample essays
  • Chapter comprehension questions

This FULL UNIT includes standards-aligned rubrics for skills on central idea, point of view and purpose, text structure, and more.

The compare/contrast analysis essay helps students look at the difference between a nonfiction text (the biography) and a fictional portrayal (the movie) of the same event and time period. It guides them through the process of identifying common themes and ideas, but noticing and evaluating the difference in how they are presented in each medium.

If you are looking for a way to engage your students in a high interest and rigorous nonfiction reading and writing unit, look no further!

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A publication of the harvard college writing program.

Harvard Guide to Using Sources 

  • The Honor Code

Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Quoting

Depending on the conventions of your discipline, you may have to decide whether to summarize a source, paraphrase a source, or quote from a source.

Scholars in the humanities tend to summarize, paraphrase, and quote texts; social scientists and natural scientists rely primarily on summary and paraphrase.

When and how to summarize

When you summarize, you provide your readers with a condensed version of an author's key points. A summary can be as short as a few sentences or much longer, depending on the complexity of the text and the level of detail you wish to provide to your readers. You will need to summarize a source in your paper when you are going to refer to that source and you want your readers to understand the source's argument, main ideas, or plot (if the source is a novel, film, or play) before you lay out your own argument about it, analysis of it, or response to it.

Before you summarize a source in your paper, you should decide what your reader needs to know about that source in order to understand your argument. For example, if you are making an argument about a novel, you should avoid filling pages of your paper with details from the book that will distract or confuse your reader. Instead, you should add details sparingly, going only into the depth that is necessary for your reader to understand and appreciate your argument. Similarly, if you are writing a paper about a journal article, you will need to highlight the most relevant parts of the argument for your reader, but you should not include all of the background information and examples. When you have to decide how much summary to put in a paper, it's a good idea to consult your instructor about whether you are supposed to assume your reader's knowledge of the sources.

Guidelines for summarizing a source in your paper

  • Identify the author and the source.
  • Represent the original source accurately.
  • Present the source’s central claim clearly.
  • Don’t summarize each point in the same order as the original source; focus on giving your reader the most important parts of the source
  • Use your own words. Don’t provide a long quotation in the summary unless the actual language from the source is going to be important for your reader to see.

Stanley Milgram (1974) reports that ordinarily compassionate people will be cruel to each other if they are commanded to be by an authority figure. In his experiment, a group of participants were asked to administer electric shocks to people who made errors on a simple test. In spite of signs that those receiving shock were experiencing great physical pain, 25 of 40 subjects continued to administer electric shocks. These results held up for each group of people tested, no matter the demographic. The transcripts of conversations from the experiment reveal that although many of the participants felt increasingly uncomfortable, they continued to obey the experimenter, often showing great deference for the experimenter. Milgram suggests that when people feel responsible for carrying out the wishes of an authority figure, they do not feel responsible for the actual actions they are performing. He concludes that the increasing division of labor in society encourages people to focus on a small task and eschew responsibility for anything they do not directly control.

This summary of Stanley Milgram's 1974 essay, "The Perils of Obedience," provides a brief overview of Milgram's 12-page essay, along with an APA style parenthetical citation. You would write this type of summary if you were discussing Milgram's experiment in a paper in which you were not supposed to assume your reader's knowledge of the sources. Depending on your assignment, your summary might be even shorter.

When you include a summary of a paper in your essay, you must cite the source. If you were using APA style in your paper, you would include a parenthetical citation in the summary, and you would also include a full citation in your reference list at the end of your paper. For the essay by Stanley Milgram, your citation in your references list would include the following information:

Milgram, S. (1974). The perils of obedience. In L.G. Kirszner & S.R. Mandell (Eds.), The Blair reader (pp.725-737).

When and how to paraphrase

When you paraphrase from a source, you restate the source's ideas in your own words. Whereas a summary provides your readers with a condensed overview of a source (or part of a source), a paraphrase of a source offers your readers the same level of detail provided in the original source. Therefore, while a summary will be shorter than the original source material, a paraphrase will generally be about the same length as the original source material.

When you use any part of a source in your paper—as background information, as evidence, as a counterargument to which you plan to respond, or in any other form—you will always need to decide whether to quote directly from the source or to paraphrase it. Unless you have a good reason to quote directly from the source , you should paraphrase the source. Any time you paraphrase an author's words and ideas in your paper, you should make it clear to your reader why you are presenting this particular material from a source at this point in your paper. You should also make sure you have represented the author accurately, that you have used your own words consistently, and that you have cited the source.

This paraphrase below restates one of Milgram's points in the author's own words. When you paraphrase, you should always cite the source. This paraphrase uses the APA in-text citation style. Every source you paraphrase should also be included in your list of references at the end of your paper. For citation format information go to the Citing Sources section of this guide.

Source material

The problem of obedience is not wholly psychological. The form and shape of society and the way it is developing have much to do with it. There was a time, perhaps, when people were able to give a fully human response to any situation because they were fully absorbed in it as human beings. But as soon as there was a division of labor things changed.

--Stanley Milgram, "The Perils of Obedience," p.737.

Milgram, S. (1974). The perils of obedience. In L.G. Kirszner & S.R. Mandell (Eds.), The Blair reader (pp.725-737). Prentice Hall.

Milgram (1974) claims that people's willingness to obey authority figures cannot be explained by psychological factors alone. In an earlier era, people may have had the ability to invest in social situations to a greater extent. However, as society has become increasingly structured by a division of labor, people have become more alienated from situations over which they do not have control (p.737).

When and how much to quote

The basic rule in all disciplines is that you should only quote directly from a text when it's important for your reader to see the actual language used by the author of the source. While paraphrase and summary are effective ways to introduce your reader to someone's ideas, quoting directly from a text allows you to introduce your reader to the way those ideas are expressed by showing such details as language, syntax, and cadence.

So, for example, it may be important for a reader to see a passage of text quoted directly from Tim O'Brien's The Things They Carried if you plan to analyze the language of that passage in order to support your thesis about the book. On the other hand, if you're writing a paper in which you're making a claim about the reading habits of American elementary school students or reviewing the current research on Wilson's disease, the information you’re providing from sources will often be more important than the exact words. In those cases, you should paraphrase rather than quoting directly. Whether you quote from your source or paraphrase it, be sure to provide a citation for your source, using the correct format. (see Citing Sources section)

You should use quotations in the following situations:

  • When you plan to discuss the actual language of a text.
  • When you are discussing an author's position or theory, and you plan to discuss the wording of a core assertion or kernel of the argument in your paper.
  • When you risk losing the essence of the author's ideas in the translation from their words to your own.
  • When you want to appeal to the authority of the author and using their words will emphasize that authority.

Once you have decided to quote part of a text, you'll need to decide whether you are going to quote a long passage (a block quotation) or a short passage (a sentence or two within the text of your essay). Unless you are planning to do something substantive with a long quotation—to analyze the language in detail or otherwise break it down—you should not use block quotations in your essay. While long quotations will stretch your page limit, they don't add anything to your argument unless you also spend time discussing them in a way that illuminates a point you're making. Unless you are giving your readers something they need to appreciate your argument, you should use quotations sparingly.

When you quote from a source, you should make sure to cite the source either with an in-text citation or a note, depending on which citation style you are using.  The passage below, drawn from O’Brien’s  The Things They Carried , uses an MLA-style citation.

On the morning after Ted Lavender died, First Lieutenant Jimmy Cross crouched at the bottom of his foxhole and burned Martha's letters. Then he burned the two photographs. There was a steady rain falling, which made it difficult, but he used heat tabs and Sterno to build a small fire, screening it with his body holding the photographs over the tight blue flame with the tip of his fingers.

He realized it was only a gesture. Stupid, he thought. Sentimental, too, but mostly just stupid. (23)

O'Brien, Tim. The Things They Carried . New York: Broadway Books, 1990.

Even as Jimmy Cross burns Martha's letters, he realizes that "it was only a gesture. Stupid, he thought. Sentimental too, but mostly just stupid" (23).

If you were writing a paper about O'Brien's The Things They Carried in which you analyzed Cross's decision to burn Martha's letters and stop thinking about her, you might want your reader to see the language O'Brien uses to illustrate Cross's inner conflict. If you were planning to analyze the passage in which O'Brien calls Cross's realization stupid, sentimental, and then stupid again, you would want your reader to see the original language.

Hidden Figures

By margot lee shetterly, hidden figures study guide.

Margot Lee Shetterly ’s Hidden Figures : The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win the Space Race is a nonfiction novel about the “human computers” who performed the calculations that launched humanity into space.

Hidden Figures follows the interwoven lives of four black women—Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson , Katherine Johnson, and Christine Darden—in third-person point of view, with their stories tied into broader historical context. Though the novel centers around their work at the Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory in Hampton, Virginia, it also covers American events over three decades, starting with World War II and ending with the lunar landing. The women are some of the many black women hired into the “West Computing” group at the NACA, which becomes NASA. They are exceptional mathematicians, and even at the height of Virginia’s Jim Crow segregation, their calculations ensure pilots’ safety in WWII and eventually land the Apollo 11 mission on the Moon.

Published in 2016, Hidden Figures was a #1 New York Times bestseller and was adapted into a critically and financially successful movie. Shetterly says in interviews that stories “tend to put these histories in silos,” even though “all of those things are American history”—women’s history, black history, space history, and civil rights history are all part of the same story—one section of which is told in Hidden Figures.

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Hidden Figures Questions and Answers

The Question and Answer section for Hidden Figures is a great resource to ask questions, find answers, and discuss the novel.

What is the area rule?

I think this has something to do with professional blacks not having the same areas as whites. Not knowing her way around the East Area, Mary asks the white women she is working with for directions to the bathroom. She is humiliated by their...

How are societal norms changed economic need

All of the women featured in Hidden Figures serve as examples of the power of hard work. This theme is explored in their professional achievements as well as their personal lives, where their reliability and engagement boosts their community. On...

Mobilization

They analyzed data and performed mathematical calculations for the research taking place at NACA.

Study Guide for Hidden Figures

Hidden Figures study guide contains a biography of Margot Lee Shetterly, literature essays, quiz questions, major themes, characters, and a full summary and analysis.

  • About Hidden Figures
  • Hidden Figures Summary
  • Character List

Lesson Plan for Hidden Figures

  • About the Author
  • Study Objectives
  • Common Core Standards
  • Introduction to Hidden Figures
  • Relationship to Other Books
  • Bringing in Technology
  • Notes to the Teacher
  • Related Links
  • Hidden Figures Bibliography

Wikipedia Entries for Hidden Figures

  • Introduction

paraphrasing and summarizing a nonfiction text hidden figures quizlet

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Paraphrasing & Summarizing

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To help the flow of your writing, it is beneficial to not always quote but instead put the information in your own words. You can paraphrase or summarize the author’s words to better match your tone and desired length. Even if you write the ideas in your own words, it is important to cite them with in-text citations or footnotes (depending on your discipline’s citation style ). 

Definitions

  • Paraphrasing allows you to use your own words to restate an author's ideas.
  • Summarizing allows you to create a succinct, concise statement of an author’s main points without copying and pasting a lot of text from the original source.

What’s the difference: Paraphrasing v. Summarizing

Explore the rest of the page to see how the same material could be quoted, paraphrased, or summarized. Depending on the length, tone, and argument of your work, you might choose one over the other. 

  • Bad Paraphrase
  • Good Paraphrase
  • Reread: Reread the original passage until you understand its full meaning.
  • Write on your own: Set the original aside, and write your paraphrase on a note card.
  • Connect: Jot down a few words below your paraphrase to remind you later how you envision using this material.
  • Check: Check your rendition with the original to make sure that your version accurately expresses all the essential information in a new form.
  • Quote: Use quotation marks to identify any unique term or phraseology you have borrowed exactly from the source.
  • Cite: Record the source (including the page) on your note card or notes document so that you can credit it easily if you decide to incorporate the material into your paper.

Explore the tabs to see the difference between an acceptable and unacceptable paraphrase based on the original text in each example.

Original Text

“Business communication is increasingly taking place internationally – in all countries, among all peoples, and across all cultures. An awareness of other cultures – of their languages, customs, experiences and perceptions – as well as an awareness of the way in which other people conduct their business, are now essential ingredients of business communication” (Chase, O’Rourke & Wallace, 2003, p.59). 

More and more business communication is taking place internationally—across all countries, peoples, and cultures.  Awareness of other cultures and the way in which people do business are essential parts of business communication (Chase, O’Rourke & Wallace, 2003, p.59)

Compare the Original and Paraphrase

Too much of the original is quoted directly, with only a few words changed or omitted. The highlighted words are too similar to the original quote: 

More and more business communication is taking place internationally —across all countries, peoples, and cultures .  Awareness of other cultures and the way in which people do business are essential parts of business communication (Chase, O’Rourke & Wallace, 2003, p.59)

Original Text 

“Business communication is increasingly taking place internationally – in all countries, among all peoples, and across all cultures. An awareness of other cultures – of their languages, customs, experiences and perceptions – as well as an awareness of the way in which other people conduct their business, are now essential ingredients of business communication” (Chase, O’Rourke & Wallace, 2003, p.59).

The importance of understanding the traditions, language, perceptions, and the manner in which people of other cultures conduct their business should not be underestimated, and it is a crucial component of business communication (Chase, O’Rourke & Wallace, 2003, p. 59).

The original’s ideas are summarized and expressed in the writer’s own words with minimal overlap with the original text's language:

The importance of understanding the traditions, language, perceptions, and the manner in which people of other cultures conduct their business should not be underestimated, and it is a crucial component of business communication (Chase, O’Rourke & Wallace, 2003, p. 59).

  • Bad Summary
  • Good Summary
  • Find the main idea: Ask yourself, “What is the main idea that the author is communicating?”
  • Avoid copying: Set the original aside, and write one or two sentences with the main point of the original on a note card or in a notes document.
  • Connect: Jot down a few words below your summary to remind you later how you envision using this material.

Business communication is worldwide, and it is essential to build awareness of other cultures and the way in which other people conduct their business. (Chase, O’Rourke & Wallace, 2003, p.59). 

Compare the Original and Summary

Too much of the original is quoted directly, with only a few words changed or omitted. The highlighted words are too similar to the original text:

Business communication is worldwide, and it is essential to build awareness of other cultures and the way in which other people conduct their business . (Chase, O’Rourke & Wallace, 2003, p.59). 

In a world that is increasingly connected, effective business communication requires us to learn about other cultures, languages, and business norms (Chase, O’Rourke & Wallace, 2003, p.59). 

The original’s ideas are summarized and expressed in the writer’s own words with minimal overlap:

In a world that is increasingly connected, effective business communication requires us to learn about other cultures , languages , and business norms (Chase, O’Rourke & Wallace, 2003, p.59). 

No matter what the source or style, you need to cite it both in-text and at the end of the paper with a full citation! Write down or record all the needed pieces of information when researching to ensure you avoid plagiarism. 

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Paraphrase and Summary

Paraphrase and summary are different writing strategies that ask you to put another author’s argument in your own words. This can help you better understand what the writer of the source is saying, so that you can communicate that message to your own reader without relying only on direct quotes. Paraphrases are used for short passages and specific claims in an argument, while summaries are used for entire pieces and focus on capturing the big picture of an argument. Both should be cited using the appropriate format (MLA, APA, etc.).  See KU Writing Center guides on APA Formatting , Chicago Formatting , and MLA Formatting for more information. 

When you paraphrase, you are using your own words to explain one of the claims of your source's argument, following its line of reasoning and its sequence of ideas. The purpose of a paraphrase is to convey the meaning of the original message and, in doing so, to prove that you understand the passage well enough to restate it. The paraphrase should give the reader an accurate understanding of the author's position on the topic. Your job is to uncover and explain all the facts and arguments involved in your subject. A paraphrase tends to be about the same length or a little shorter than the thing being paraphrased.

To paraphrase:

  • Alter the wording of the passage without changing its meaning. Key words, such as names and field terminology, may stay the same (i.e. you do not need to rename Milwaukee or osteoporosis), but all other words must be rephrased. 
  • Retain the basic logic of the argument, sequence of ideas, and examples used in the passage. 
  • Accurately convey the author's meaning and opinion. 
  • Keep the length approximately the same as the original passage. 
  • Do not forget to cite where the information came from. Even though it is in your own words, the idea belongs to someone else, and that source must be acknowledged. 

A summary covers the main points of the writer’s argument in your own words. Summaries are generally much shorter than the original source, since they do not contain any specific examples or pieces of evidence. The goal of a summary is to give the reader a clear idea of what the source is arguing, without going into any specifics about what they are using to argue their point.

To summarize:  

  • Identify what reading or speech is being summarized. 
  • State the author’s thesis and main claims of their argument in your own words. Just like paraphrasing, make sure everything but key terms is reworded. 
  • Avoid specific details or examples. 
  • Avoid your personal opinions about the topic. 
  • Include the conclusion of the original material. 
  • Cite summarized information as well. 

In both the paraphrase and summary, the author's meaning and opinion are retained. However, in the case of the summary, examples and illustrations are omitted. Summaries can be tremendously helpful because they can be used to encapsulate everything from a long narrative passage of an essay, to a chapter in a book, to an entire book.

When to Use Paraphrasing vs. Summarizing 

ParaphraseSummarize
To get a specific point or example across To get the general ideas of a source across
To use a short selection from the source To use a long selection from the source 
To avoid excessive quotingTo introduce a source for the first time 

Updated June 2022  

paraphrasing and summarizing a nonfiction text hidden figures quizlet

A) Amy's anxiety pushed her directly

IMAGES

  1. Summarizing A Nonfiction Text

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  2. Hidden Figures Vocabulary Words w/Print Concepts Diagram

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  4. 50+ Summarizing Nonfiction Texts worksheets for 2nd Year on Quizizz

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  1. NOTE TAKING PARAPHRASING AND SUMMARIZING ONLINE WORKSHOP

  2. Description (Nonfiction Text Structure) Interactive Notebook Activity (IRITN L7)

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  6. Paraphrasing for Class 8, NTRCA School English Teachers & IELTS । Poem & Text Paraphrasing।

COMMENTS

  1. Paraphrasing and Summarizing a nonfiction text: hidden figures

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  2. Paraphrasing and Summarizing Flashcards

    Paraphrasing may lead to text that is just as long as the original but is written using one's own words and language. Gist Summary. Focusing on the central idea, but identifying the who, what, where, when, why and how of a text. Gist summary is best for summarizing: Expository texts like newspaper articles or any text about an event.

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  4. Hidden Figures Study Guide

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  5. Hidden Figures Quizzes

    Hidden Figures Quiz 1. 1 Who wrote Hidden Figures? 2 When was Hidden Figures published? 3 When does the prologue begin/take place? 4 When does the main text begin? 5 What genre is the book? 6 Who is responsible for hiring the first black female computers at Langley? 7 Why does the NACA hire black female computers?

  6. Hidden Figures Prologue Summary & Analysis

    Shetterly 's interest in the NACA's hidden figures becomes an obsession. She wants to memorialize their accomplishments in a way that won't be lost to history, giving them the kind of epic narrative previously only granted to figures like the Wright Brothers, Alexander Hamilton, and Martin Luther King Jr. Shetterly's desire to raise the ...

  7. Hidden Figures After Reading

    Thanks for exploring this SuperSummary Study Guide of "Hidden Figures" by Margot Lee Shetterly. A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student ...

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  9. 2.7: Summarizing and Paraphrasing

    A summary is written in your own words. It contains few or no quotes. A summary is always shorter than the original text, often about 1/3 as long as the original. It is the ultimate fat-free writing. An article or paper may be summarized in a few sentences or a couple of paragraphs. A book may be summarized in an article or a short paper.

  10. Hidden Figures Nonfiction Reading FULL Unit with Literary Analysis

    This FULL UNIT includes standards-aligned rubrics for skills on central idea, point of view and purpose, text structure, and more. The compare/contrast analysis essay helps students look at the difference between a nonfiction text (the biography) and a fictional portrayal (the movie) of the same event and time period.

  11. Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Quoting

    Guidelines for summarizing a source in your paper. Identify the author and the source. Represent the original source accurately. Present the source's central claim clearly. Don't summarize each point in the same order as the original source; focus on giving your reader the most important parts of the source. Use your own words.

  12. Hidden Figures Study Guide

    Margot Lee Shetterly's Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win the Space Race is a nonfiction novel about the "human computers" who performed the calculations that launched humanity into space.. Hidden Figures follows the interwoven lives of four black women—Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson, Katherine Johnson, and Christine ...

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    And that was before subjecting the report to the style, clarity, grammar, and presentation standards that were Pearl Young's legacy, before the addition of the charts and fancy graphics that reduced the data sheet to a coherent, visually persuasive point. A final report might be months, even years, in the making. Read Nathan's summary of the ...

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    Katherine stopped working to raise a family. she got to study under William Clayton. she went to graduate school. What is life in Newport News like for Dorothy. She lived with Fredrick and Annie Lucy and got two meals a du. she lived in a single room and he suitcase was her closet. She road the bus.

  16. Guides: Avoiding Plagiarism: Paraphrasing & Summarizing

    Paraphrasing allows you to use your own words to restate an author's ideas. Summarizing allows you to create a succinct, concise statement of an author's main points without copying and pasting a lot of text from the original source. What's the difference: Paraphrasing v. Summarizing. Explore the rest of the page to see how the same ...

  17. Solved: Paraphrasing and Summarizing a Nonfiction Text: Hidden Figures

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    Q-Chat. Jessica_Forthuber. Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like paraphrasing, paraphrasing/ summarizing, paraphrasing and more.

  19. Paraphrase and Summary

    To summarize: Identify what reading or speech is being summarized. State the author's thesis and main claims of their argument in your own words. Just like paraphrasing, make sure everything but key terms is reworded. Avoid specific details or examples. Avoid your personal opinions about the topic. Include the conclusion of the original material.

  20. Paraphrasing and Summarizing Flashcards

    Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like paraphrasing, paraphrasing, summarizing and more. Home. Subjects. Expert solutions. Create. ... ways of summarizing text or speech - get a general idea of the original - check you understanding

  21. Solved: Paraphrasing and Summarizing a Nonfiction Text: Hidden Figures

    Paraphrasing and Summarizing a Nonfiction Text: Hidden Figures TIME REMAINING Pre-Test Active 47:48 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Read the excerpt from Hidden Figures.