Paraphrasing skills
When you paraphrase, you use your own words to express something that was written or said by another person.
Putting it into your own words can clarify the message, make it more relevant to your audience , or give it greater impact.
Paraphrasing vs. summarizing:
In contrast, a summary is a brief overview of an entire discussion or argument. You might summarize a whole research paper or conversation in a single paragraph, for example, or with a series of bullet points, using your own words and style.
People often summarize when the original material is long, or to emphasize key facts or points. Summaries leave out detail or examples that may distract the reader from the most important information, and they simplify complex arguments, grammar and vocabulary.
Summarizing and paraphrasing can save time, increase understanding, and give authority and credibility to your work. Both tools are useful when the precise wording of the original communication is less important than its overall meaning.
Paraphrasing techniques:
1. Use Synonyms
2. Use a Different Word Form
3. Change from the Active to the Passive
4. Change the word order
5. Use a combination of techniques
Source: QUT Library