Engl1302 Ba2handout
Engl1302 Ba2handout
Synthesizing Sources
What is a synthesis?
Writing a strong literature review requires the ability to synthesize or combine elements of several sources
to help you make a point. The purpose of Brief Assignment 2 is to give you the chance to practice this process
of synthesis. In short, synthesis is a tool for drawing together particular themes or traits that you observe in
various texts and reorganizing the material according to themes or traits put forth by you and driven by your
thesis.
Synthesizing is simply a matter of making connections or putting things together. We synthesize information
naturally to help others see the connections between things. For example, when you report to a friend the things
that other friends have said about a movie, you are engaging in synthesis. Instead of merely attending to
different categories and trying to find some sort of similarity or difference, synthesizing is a matter of pulling
various sources together into some kind of harmony. It is the ability to combine clearly and coherently the ideas
of more than one source with your own.
For instance, you have probably already stored up a mental database of the various things youve heard about
particular professors. If your database contains several negative comments, you might synthesize that
information and use it to help you decide not to take a class from a particular instructor.
So you might be asking yourself, How am I supposed to synthesize? The key to success in this class with any
assignment, not just synthesis, is to read well, to understand the main idea of a text and the developmental
structure of the source articles, and to identify the points of contact between the various sources and your own
argument. This means seeing how the sources agree, disagree, reinforce, subvert, explain, and contradict one
another in the context of your thesis.
Synthesis synonyms: relationship, integration, organization, blend, harmony, fusion.
Isnt synthesis just a fancy word for summary?
No. This is the most common error that students fall into when first attempting to write a synthesis. You already
know how to write a summary, so it may be easy to think that a synthesis is just a summary of different sources.
A mere collection of summaries, while much easier to produce, has one very serious shortcoming: it doesnt
tell your reader how the sources relate to one another. Keep in mind that written sources dealing with the
same topic typically include many of the same facts and arguments (usually just phrased differently). So, if you
just summarize each source in turn, you usually end up just presenting the same ideas over and over whether
you realize it or not.
Synthesis protip: most students who earn a C, D, or F on BA2 spend most, if not all, of the assignment
summarizing.
Your BA2 must be thesis-driven.
On BA2, you are going to be asked to produce a thesis-driven synthesis of three articles. Generally, a good
thesis will have the following characteristics:
1. It identifies the common theme that you are going to write about
2. It identifies HOW or WHY the authors are using that theme
3. Beyond stating the similarities and/or differences, it argues what larger idea the reader can arrive at by
looking at both texts. Its not enough to simply say, Both author A and B discuss ______. WHY do they
discuss this theme/idea? WHY is it important?
3. Notice the experts tell us phrase that tells us that the writer is combining the ideas of experts about
opposition to immigration and then giving us examples. Similarly provides a seamless transition between
the two authors discussed in this paragraph.
4. The italicized words trace the coherence in the sources expressed by the repeated key words that relate to
economic objections or questions. The sources are made to work together to form a coherent discussion of the
idea expressed in the topic sentence through the efforts of a third independent writer. On BA2, that third
independent writer is you.
How should I organize my essay?
The following is a good way to organize your essay. Keep in mind that this is only a suggestion.
Introduction: Introduce your reader to the authors, the name of the articles, and the theme you plan to discuss
two or three sentences. Dont list facts about the authors. Rather, tell us what articles you are discussing and the
common theme that emerges in each of them. Then, end your introduction with your thesis statement. Refer
back to guidelines from earlier when writing your thesis statement.
Body paragraphs: Successful BA2s usually have two body paragraphs, all of which are related to the thesis
statement from the introduction. In each body paragraph, you need a clear topic sentence that introduces your
reader to the topic that you plan to discuss throughout the paragraph. Important: do not discuss the same topic
in two separate paragraphs. Rather, find two separate topics that all relate back to your thesis and dedicate one
paragraph to each topic.
Be sure that each body paragraph:
1. Begins with a topic sentence that informs readers of the topic of the paragraph. Do not use quotes to do this.
This needs to be in your own words.
2. Includes information from more than one source.
3. Clearly indicates which material comes from which source using lead in phrases and in-text citations.
4. Shows the similarities or differences between the different sources in ways that make the paper as
informative as possible.
A bulk of your synthesis will occur throughout the body paragraphs. See the sample synthesis from earlier for
good tips on how to write a solid synthesis-driven paragraph.
Conclusion: Restate (not verbatim) your thesis statement in the first sentence of the conclusion. In two or three
sentences thereafter, recap what we have learned from reading your synthesis essay.
Your BA2 is due on Friday, February 12 on Raider Writer by 11:59:59 p.m.