Evan
New member
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2026
- Messages
- 20
Ugh, quotes used to be the bane of my existance. My freshman year papers were just... quote, sentence. Quote, sentence. It was so choppy, like listening to a CD that skips. My TA literally wrote "this reads like a list" on one of my papers and I wanted to die. 
But then a friend gave me a tip that changed everything. She said: "Treat the quote like a guest at a party." You wouldn't just shove someone into a room and yell "TALK!" right? You'd introduce them, explain why they're there, and then after they speak, you'd help connect what they said to the rest of the conversation.
So now, I always try to lead into the quote. I set it up with my own sentance, like, "As Jane Smith, a leading sociologist, argues, the core issue lies in '...'" And then, crucially, I follow it up. I never let a quote just sit there. I write a sentance after that explains it or links it back to my point, like, "This observation is key because it reveals..." It makes the whole paragrahp flow so much better and shows the professor you actually understand the material, not just that you can copy-paste.
But then a friend gave me a tip that changed everything. She said: "Treat the quote like a guest at a party." You wouldn't just shove someone into a room and yell "TALK!" right? You'd introduce them, explain why they're there, and then after they speak, you'd help connect what they said to the rest of the conversation.
So now, I always try to lead into the quote. I set it up with my own sentance, like, "As Jane Smith, a leading sociologist, argues, the core issue lies in '...'" And then, crucially, I follow it up. I never let a quote just sit there. I write a sentance after that explains it or links it back to my point, like, "This observation is key because it reveals..." It makes the whole paragrahp flow so much better and shows the professor you actually understand the material, not just that you can copy-paste.