Common Reasons to Use Sources
If you find yourself including quotations or sources merely to back up your argument or to fulfill an assignment requirement, remember the intended purpose of sources and citation:
Adapted from Yale College Writing Center's "Using Sources" webpage.
Key Questions to Ask:
If you find yourself including quotations or sources merely to back up your argument or to fulfill an assignment requirement, remember the intended purpose of sources and citation:
Show how your voice enters into an intellectual conversation
Communicate your understanding of an issue and your credibility
Inspire and enrich your own ideas
Acknowledge the work of others
Connect readers to related research
Adapted from Yale College Writing Center's "Using Sources" webpage.
The BEAM “rhetorical vocabulary” describes four different ways to use sources in a research assignment.
Background sources
Some sources provide general information or factual evidence about a topic that can be used to provide context.
e.g., encyclopedia article, dictionary definition
Exhibits (examples) or Evidence sources
These sources contain material that the author analyzes or interprets. Often, these sources are used to provide an example of, or support for, the argument that the author is trying to make.
e.g., literary or artistic works, field observations, scientific specimens, contemporary reviews, historical documents
Argument sources
These sources are used to provide examples of the discussions and conversations going on among scholars within the field. Often, a writer will either support or refute the arguments that other scholars are making, or else discuss how those individual arguments contribute to the broader conversations surrounding the topic.
e.g., scholarly articles, opinion pieces
Method/theory sources
These sources provide general concepts, theories, or procedures that the writer adopted to carry out his or her research.
e.g., references to theories/methods used by the author (e.g., feminism, New Historicism/ direct observation, mixed methods)
Based on: Bizup, J. (2008). “BEAM: A rhetorical vocabulary for teaching research-based writing.” Rhetoric Review 27, 1: 72–86.
Image: Stephen Francoeur on Flickr.