Punctuation of Indirect Quotations
Punctuation of Indirect Quotations
Play the quick video lesson HERE and click the upper left back arrow to return to this lesson.
Common Core Language Standard 2
When students begin writing reports of information or summaries in elementary school, the often used teacher direction is “Put it in your own words.” Now paraphrasing and summarizing are useful skills; however, putting someone else’s idea into your own words does not make it your own idea. The writer must faithfully represent what the idea actually is and then credit the originator of the idea with a proper citation.
Now let’s read the mechanics lesson and study the examples.
An indirect quotation reports someone else’s words without quoting each word. Indirect quotations still require proper citations, but not quotation marks. A citation is the name of the source (the author’s last name or title, if no author is listed) and the page number of the print material where the author’s words are found. Example: Cheetahs are the fastest animals (Lee 5).
Now circle or highlight what is right and revise what is wrong according to mechanics lesson.
Practice: Tommy asked, “May I have some?” “Did he have to ask that question?” “Wow!”
Let’s check the Practice Answers.
Mechanics Practice Answers: Tommy asked, “May I have some?” “Did he have to ask that question”?“Wow!”
Now let’s apply what we have learned.
Writing Application: Write your own sentence using an indirect quotation.
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