Information Integration Quiz

Description

This is based on Graff's book, chapters 2 and 3.
brian68294
Quiz by brian68294, updated more than 1 year ago
brian68294
Created by brian68294 about 9 years ago
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Resource summary

Question 1

Question
Why is it primarily important for us to be able to summarize effectively?
Answer
  • It helps others get a better understanding of our own ideas.
  • It helps us to better understand the ideas of others.
  • It is a effective way to link our own ideas relative to other's ideas.
  • None of the above.

Question 2

Question
What are some possible issues that can arise from poor summarizing?
Answer
  • Wrestling too much with what the text says, and becoming unsure of whether it has anything to do with what you're talking about.
  • Taking too much time devoted to what other's are saying can detract from what you're saying.
  • Summarizing to the extent that the summary itself misses the "meat" of the source material.
  • All of the above.

Question 3

Question
To truly write a good summary, you need to play the "believing game." What exactly does this mean?
Answer
  • Being able to believe in the credibility of everything you're summarizing.
  • Understanding the relation the summary has to your own views.
  • Being able to put yourself in the shoes of the person who created the source you're summarizing.
  • None of the above.

Question 4

Question
In general, what makes a summary good?
Answer
  • Being able to balance what the author is saying, and what the writer is saying as well.
  • Being able to deconstruct what all the other author's are saying in your summaries.
  • Proving your own work to be a cut above your summaries.
  • All of the above.

Question 5

Question
What must you ABSOLUTELY avoid when writing summaries?
Answer
  • Writing inaccurate summaries.
  • Writing biased summaries.
  • Writing cherry-picking summaries.(picking out specific portions of something to support your argument, when the source material as a whole does not back up your argument.)
  • All of the above, as writing unbiased, accurate, and truthful summaries is the way to go.

Question 6

Question
What exactly is "the closest cliche syndrome?"
Answer
  • Acknowledging that something an author wrote is undeniable truth to support your argument.
  • If you have more sources, it makes your argument the right one.
  • Your argument's strength is determined by one reliable source.
  • Mistaking what the writer said to mean one thing, while the writer him/herself meant something completely different.

Question 7

Question
How do you need to manipulate a summary as you incorporate a summary into your work, at least in terms of relating it to what you're saying?
Answer
  • Make sure to reference what you're summarizing.
  • Making sure the summary is no more than three sentences.
  • Making sure the summary is more than three sentences.
  • Putting a spin on the summary so as to make way for your own argument.

Question 8

Question
What's a good way to add credibility and power to your summaries?
Answer
  • Explaining the importance of what the person is saying.
  • Using quotes to show the person's exact words.
  • Showing the medium the summary came from.
  • None of the above.

Question 9

Question
What is a problem that can arise when using quotations in a summary?
Answer
  • The quotation might not be descriptive enough.
  • The quotation may be believed to "speak for itself," when really, the quote does not mean the same to the writer as it does the audience.
  • The quote can be too long, and unable to convey a clear enough meaning.
  • The quote may be in another language.(Gotta fill this fourth question in somehow, am I right?)

Question 10

Question
Above all else, what do quotations need to be, in terms of supporting your argument?
Answer
  • Long.
  • Important.
  • Accurate.
  • Relevant.

Question 11

Question
In order to make a quote relevant, what do you need to do with it?
Answer
  • Cite where it came from.
  • Explain the person who said it.
  • Frame it in a way that it shows what it has to do with what you're saying.
  • None of the above.

Question 12

Question
What is a "hit-and-run" quotation?
Answer
  • Writing a quotation and then moving on without explaining its significance.
  • Forgetting to report the source of the quote.
  • Explaining a quote in detail.
  • None of the above.
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