Vertech Editorial
Changing a few words is not paraphrasing. Here is the method that actually works and keeps you out of trouble.
Real paraphrasing means understanding an idea and re-expressing it in your own words with your own sentence structure. Swapping synonyms or rearranging clauses while keeping the same skeleton is not paraphrasing - it is patchwriting, and most plagiarism checkers catch it.
This is the mistake that gets students in trouble more than outright copying. You read a source, change a few words, and assume you are in the clear. Turnitin does not agree. Here is the method that actually works.
The Read-Close-Write Method
This is the simplest technique that reliably produces original paraphrasing:
Read the passage carefully - Understand the core idea, not just the words. What is the author actually saying?
Close the source - Put it away. Do not look at it while writing. This forces you to use your own language.
Write the idea from memory - Explain it as if you are telling a friend. Use your natural sentence patterns.
Compare and cite - Open the source again. Check that your version captures the meaning but does not mirror the structure. Add your citation.
What Patchwriting Looks Like (And Why It Fails)
Original source
"Sleep deprivation significantly impairs cognitive function, particularly affecting memory consolidation and decision-making processes."
Patchwriting (bad)
"Lack of sleep greatly impairs cognitive abilities, especially impacting memory consolidation and decision-making." - Same structure, swapped synonyms. Turnitin flags this.
Real paraphrase (good)
"When students do not get enough sleep, their brains struggle to store new information and make clear choices - two abilities that are critical during exam season (Smith, 2024)." - Different structure, same idea, properly cited.
When to Quote Instead of Paraphrase
Sometimes the original wording is so specific or well-phrased that paraphrasing would weaken it. In those cases, use a direct quote with quotation marks and a page number. Quote when the exact language matters - technical definitions, famous phrases, or data points.
A good rule: if you have tried to paraphrase three times and it still sounds like the original, just quote it. It is better to quote properly than to paraphrase badly. For tools that help with rewording, see our Quillbot vs Grammarly comparison.
The golden rule
Always cite your source, even when paraphrasing. A paraphrase without a citation is plagiarism - even if the words are entirely your own. The idea still belongs to someone else.
For structured approaches to research and source integration, our Brainstorming Expert prompt at Vertech Academy helps you develop original arguments from your sources.
