In a synthesis, you bring
things together. This combination, integration, or merging creates
something new--your synthesis. The action of synthesis is basic to our
world. Take, for example, what happens when a single oxygen molecule is
combined with two hydrogen molecules. Water is created or synthesized.
Hard to get more basic than that.
You
also use synthesis to make personal decisions. If two instructors are
teaching a class you must take, you may synthesize your past
experiences with the teachers to choose the best class for you.
Research Essays:
Thesis Driven
In school, when writing a synthesis from your research, your sources
may come from the school's library, a textbook or Internet. Important
points to keep in mind:
First, regardless of where your sources come from or how many you have,
what you write should be driven by a thesis that you devise. After
reading and studying your sources, you should form a personal point of
view, a slant to connect your sources.
A
quick example--Let's say you've read
three folktales: Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Little Red Riding
Hood, the Pied Piper--and now you must write a synthesis of them. As
you study the three sources, you think about links between them and
come up with this thesis:
Folktales use fear
to teach children lessons.
Then you use this thesis to synthesize your three sources as you
support your point of view. You combine elements from the
three sources to prove and illustrate this thesis. Your support points
could focus on the lessons for children:
Lesson
1: Never talk
to strangers. Lesson 2:
Don't wander from home. Lesson 3:
Appearances can deceive us.
This step of outlining your thesis and
main points is a crucial one when writing a synthesis. If your goal in
writing a research essay is
to provide readers a unified perspective based on sources, the unified
perspective must be clear before the writing begins.
Once the writing begins, your point of view is then carried through to
the paragraph and sentence levels. Let's examine some techniques for
achieving the unity that a good synthesis requires. First, here’s an
example of an unsuccessful attempt at synthesizing sources:
Many sources agree that capital
punishment is not a crime deterrent. [this is the idea around which the
sources should be unified. Now comes the sources] According to Judy
Pennington in an interview with Helen Prejean, crime rates in New
Orleans rise for at least eight weeks following executions (110). Jimmy
Dunne notes that crime rates often go up in the first two or three
months following an execution. “Death in the Americas” argues that
America’s crime rate as a whole has increased drastically since the
re-instatement of the death penalty in the 1960s. The article notes
that 700 crimes are committed for every 100,000 Americans (2). Helen
Prejean cites Ellis in her book to note that in 1980, 500,000 people
were behind bars and in 1990 that figure rose to 1.1 million (112).
Sample
student paragraph adapted from "Literature Review: Synthesizing
Multiple Sources." Retrieved 2011 from
http://www.iupui.edu/~uwc/pdf/Literature%20Review%20and%20Synthesis.pdf
This paragraph certainly uses a number of sources. However, the sources
are presented in a random, grocery list fashion. Besides the main point
at the beginning, there is no further attempt to synthesize. The
sources seem tossed in, like ingredients in a salad. Let's examine a
possible revision of that paragraph and how an adequate synthesis might
be achieved:
Major studies suggest that capital
punishment fails to deter crime. Helen Prejean, in "Deadman Walking,"
reviews decades of statistics that indicate capital punishment does
little to lower crime. [Key idea
from topic sentence---"capital punishment fails to deter
crime"--- echoed in sentence about source--"capital punishment
does
little to lower crime." Repetition links source to main idea.]
Based on this
evidence, Prejean concludes “Executions do not deter crime . . . the
U.S. murder rate is no higher in states that do not have the death
penalty than those who do” (110). ["Based
on this evidence" forces reader to refer back to "statistics"
in previous sentence.] Prejean’s
point is
reiterated from a historical perspective in Dunne's article
“Death in the Americas.” [This
sentence provides a thought bridge
between two sources.]
Dunne first points out that, despite the social and economic upheavals
from 1930 to 1960, crime rates were unchanged (2). [Linking
phrase:"Dunne first points out"]
However, after the reinstatement of the death penalty in the 1960s,
“crime rates soared” (2).
[Linking phase "However, Dunne notes."]
The result is a matrix of connective devices that unifies the sources
around a key idea stated at the beginning. Although this matrix seems
complex, it is actually built on a simple three-point strategy.
Stay in
charge. You the writer must control the sources, using
them to serve your purpose. In good synthesis writing, sources are used
to support what you, the writer, have already said in your own words.
Stay
focused. Your main point is not merely stated once and
left to wilt. Your main idea is repeated and echoed throughout as a way
to link the sources, to weave them together into a strong fabric of
meaning.
Stay
strategic. Notice the "source sandwich" strategy at work.
First, the author sets up the source with its background and relevance
to the point. After the source comes a follows up in his/her own words
as a way to bridge or link to the next part. In other words, the
writer's own words are used like two slices of bread, with the source
in the middle.
Follow these simple principles when using sources in your writing and
you will achieve the most important goal of synthesis writing--to
create a whole greater than its parts.