citation refresher
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CITATION REFRESHER
L I B R A RY T E C H TA L KM O N D AY, N O V. 3 0 , 2 0 1 5
REMIND ME: WHAT IS A CITATION?• “In the literary sense, any written or spoken reference
to an authority or precedent or to the verbatim words of another speaker or writer. “
– Online Dictionary of Library and Information Science• Citations let the reader of your paper know that you
used others’ idea(s) to support your research and/or conclusions.
BUT SERIOUSLY, WHY?
• Because you need to specify which ideas are not your own.• Because you need to give credit to the original source.• Because your readers may want to know more. A
citation gives them directions for how to find a source. Like an address!
CITATION STYLES
• APA: American Psychological Association– Psychology, Education, Social Sciences, Nursing
• MLA: Modern Language Association– Literature, Arts, Humanities
• AMA: American Medical Association– Most medical fields
• Others: Chicago, Turabian
TWO TYPES OF CITATION
• IN TEXT CITATION– Giving credit in your paper, right when you use an idea
• BIBLIOGRAPHIC– Listing all of the sources you used on one page
IN-TEXT CITATION:
T H E B A S I C S
QUOTING VS. PARAPHRASING• QUOTING
– Using the author’s exact words
• PARAPHRASING– Using the author’s idea, but putting it in your own words– STILL NEEDS A CITATION
QUOTING VS. PARAPHRASINGThis prospect scared industrial-scale meat producers into organizing a coordinated
pushback. Recognizing that, in the era of smartphones and social media, any worker could easily shoot and distribute damning video, meat producers began pressing for legislation that would outlaw this kind of whistleblowing.Genoways, Ted. "Animals Suffer Needlessly for Food Production." Vegetarianism. Ed. Amy Francis. Farmington Hills, MI: Greenhaven Press, 2015. Current Controversies. Rpt. from "Gagged by Big Ag." Mother Jones (2013). Opposing Viewpoints in Context. Web. 30 Nov. 2015.
The author writes, “Recognizing that, in the era of smartphones and social media, any worker could easily shoot and distribute damning video, meat producers began pressing for legislation that would outlaw this kind of whistleblowing” (Genoways para. 7).
The author points out that due to the popularity of social media and smartphones, video evidence could be captured easily by anyone, including workers in the meat industry. This posed a threat to meat producers, so they fought to make it illegal for their workers to leak this type of evidence (Genoways para. 7).
QUOTE
PARAPHRASE
FORMATTING THE IN-TEXT CITATION• Introduce the thought or idea you are using
– The author writes– According to one study– Smith states that
• Drop Quotes=using a quote or idea without introducing it
IN-TEXT CITATION: MLA• In-text citation comes at the end of a quote or
paraphrase• Include author(s)’s last name and page number
END QUOTE OPEN PARENTHESIS CITATION CLOSE PARENTHESIS PERIOD
EXAMPLES:According to the author, “Social media is harmful to teens” (Delnero 135).According to the authors, “Video games cause dyslexia” (Delnero, Smith 197).Delnero writes, “Social media is harmful to teens” (135).
IN-TEXT CITATION: APA• In-text citation comes at either the beginning or end of the
idea• Include author(s)’s last name and year of publication• Use signal phrases
EXAMPLES:A study by Delnero, Smith, and Johnson (2010) found that social media is harmful to teens.According to a 2008 study, “Video games cause Dyslexia” (Delnero & Smith).Delnero (2015) writes, “Social media is harmful to teens.”
IN-TEXT CITATION: AMA• Use superscript numbers that correspond with the
reference list• Numbers come after signal phrase• CTRL + SHIFT + PLUS will create superscript numbers
EXAMPLES:• According to a one study3, video games can cause dyslexia as well as vision
and hearing impairments.(The third item on the reference page will be a full citation for this study)• Multiple studies6, 7, 12 have shown that social media causes harm to teens.(The 6th, 7th, and 12th items on the reference page will be citations for the studies that go with this data)
BIBLIOGRAPHIES:
T H E B A S I C S
GENERAL FORMATTING
• One inch margins• 12 pt. font (Times New Roman)• DOUBLE SPACED
MLA WORKS CITED
• MLA bibliography is called “Works Cited”– This should be at the top of your page and centered
• Hanging indent– All lines EXCEPT THE FIRST are indented– Highlight all the citations you would like to format. Right click and choose
Paragraph. Under Indentation go to the drop-down box that says Special and choose Hanging. Done!
• You will always start with the author. For MLA, we list the authors LAST NAME and then the FIRST NAME with a comma between
– Ex: Delnero, Chelsea
MLA CITATION: BASIC RULES
• All citations, no matter the format, require basically the same information– You must include as much information as you can! Remember: a citation is an
address!• Start with the author. Last name, First name• Books and Journal titles (Thing “BIG” titles) are italicized• Article or chapter titles are in quotation marks• Other required info: Publication date, Date accessed, Medium (Print, Web,
etc.), Page numbers
APA REFERENCES
• APA bibliography is called “References”– This should be at the top of your page and centered
• Hanging indent– All lines EXCEPT THE FIRST are indented– Highlight all the citations you would like to format. Right click and choose
Paragraph. Under Indentation go to the drop-down box that says Special and choose Hanging. Done!
• You will always start with the author. For APA, we list the authors LAST NAME and then the FIRST AND MIDDLE (if applicable) initials with periods between them.
– Ex: Delnero, C.A.
APA CITATION: THE BASICS
• For more than one author separate with commas. Use the AMPERSAND (&) for the last author.
– Ex: Delnero, C.A., Smith, J.R., & Doe, R.R.• Italicize the titles of books and journals. Do not italicize or use quotations
for the title of a chapter or article.• Use the same punctuation as the titles for books and journals• Other information required: Publication date, Date accessed, Page numbers
AMA REFERENCES
• AMA bibliography is called “References”– This should be at the top of your page and centered
• References are listed by the order in which they appear in your paper• You will always start with the author. For AMA, we list the authors LAST
NAME and then the FIRST AND MIDDLE (if applicable) initials WITHOUT commas or periods between them. Separate each new author with a comma.
– Ex: Delnero CA– Ex: Delnero CA, Smith JR, Doe RR.
AMA CITATION: THE BASICS
• Titles of journals are abbreviated according to the National Library of Medicine
– Ex: Journal of the American College of Surgeons will become J Am Coll Surg
• Article titles only have the first word capitalized and the first word after a colon.
– Ex: Distinguishing diabetes: Differentiate between type 1 & type 2 DM.• Other information required: Year published, Page numbers
CITATION TOOLS
DATABASES BY SUBJECT CITATIONS• EasyBib• Tweet 2 Cite• bibme
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