Referencing & Bibliographies
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Referencing & Bibliographies
When to reference
quoting the exact words of another writer
closely summarising a passage from another writer (paraphrasing)
using an idea or material which is directly based on the work of another writer
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Referencing styles
APA (American Psychological Association) more information can be found at the
INFO1010 Referencing page:
Harvard or Author-dateChicagoMLAVancouver<click>
http://www.newcastle.edu.au/library/info1010/apa.html
In-text referencing
acknowledge others’ work at the point it appears or is discussed in your essay
relies on reader getting the details from your bibliography or works cited list.
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APA style Intext referencing
In-text referencing
It’s there to refer the reader to the full details in the bibliography.
In-text referencing relies on the Bibliography or Reference list at the end of the article, chapter, etc.
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In-text referencing
one author: Shaw (1995) compares various testing
methods …
OR
In a recent study of various testing methods (Shaw, 1995) ...
• page numbers should be included only when using a direct quote
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In-text referencing
two authors: Robinson and Jones (1997) discuss the
implications of the major theories of …
One implication of these theories is that there may be a detectable increase in the rate of cooling in the earth (Robinson & Jones, 1997).
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In-text referencing
three, four or five authors: cite all authors the first time, then for
subsequent citations only use the surname of the first author followed by “et al.”
… are the major theoretical approaches (James, Larkin & Jones, 1998)
Which then becomes….. (James, et al., 1998).
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In-text referencing
Six or more authors:Use et al each time:
•Graham, et al. (1994) discuss the problems associated with …
•… found to be the major problems (Graham, et al., 1994)
•But use all the names in the bibliography
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In-text referencing
Where there is no author, use the title and publication date, e.g.
Recent fossil discoveries have shown … (World of scientific discovery, 1994)
You need only use the first 3-4 words of a title - enough to distinguish it from other items in the Bibliography
Do NOT use Anon or Anonymous<click>
Secondary referencing
Sometimes you will read important information cited by someone else.
In the in-text reference you need to mention the original author
Jones found that … (as cited in Miller 1996)•In the bibliography, you only include the
work you read, ie only Miller.
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Reference Lists & Bibliographies
You must include a Works cited list and a Bibliography at the end of your report, including full details of all the works cited Works cited/Reference List
• appears at the end of the essay and includes all the works cited within the essay itself in alphabetical order by author
Bibliography• includes the wider list of works that you read as
background in your research but did not reference directly in the essay
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Bibliographies
Bibliographies must: be in alphabetical order by author’s surname
•list items without authors in alphabetical order by their title - do not list under “Anonymous” or “Anon”
have all the elements of the reference in the correct order
use consistent punctuation throughout<click>
Works cited / Bibliography
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Bibliography syntax
There is a set pattern to when and how you put information in a bibliography, even down to the commas and full stops.
This pattern repeats itself for most forms – books, articles, videos, web pages etc
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Bibliography syntax
Author. Date. Title (ed). Place. PublisherSmith, J. (2000). Writing Reports (2nd ed.). Sydney: Booklist
House, S. & Call, T. (1999) Reporting the research. New York: Bookers
Cloak, P. (2001) Focus on reports Journal of Professional Writing 16,(2) 12-18
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Bibliography syntax
Changes do not really disturb the order. Eg - no author? – the title takes the author’s
place in the syntax.
Title. Date. Place and PublisherWebsters geographical dictionary. (1949).
Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster<click>
Books
Author(s) or Editor(s). (Year of publication). Title. (Edition) if applicable*. Place of publication: Publisher.
Jones, B. T. & Smith, N. V. (Eds.). (1982). Extinction. New York : Barnes and Ellis.
* Only include the edition if it is not the first edition, e.g. (2nd ed.), (5th ed.), (rev.ed.)
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Chapters in books
Author(s) of chapter. (Year of publication). Title of chapter. In Editor(s) of book. Title of book. (page numbers of chapter). Place of publication: Publisher.
<click>Schwartz, M. T. & Billoski, T. V. (1982) Greenhouse hypothesis: effect on dinosaur extinction. In B. T. Jones & N. V. Smith (Eds.). Extinction (pp. 175-189). New York: Barnes and Ellis.
Journal articles
Author(s). (year of publication). Title of article. Title of journal, volume number, (issue number), month or season, page numbers.
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Schwartz, M. T. (1976). Evolving ecosystems: role in dinosaur extinction. Nature, 12 (8), 16-17.
only use if there is no issue number
Full-text journal articles from electronic databases
Author(s). (year of publication) Article title. Title of journal, volume number (issue number), page numbers, Retrieved month day, year, from database name.
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Wrubel, R. (1998). Biotechnology: right or
wrong? BioScience, 48, 210-211. Retrieved March 9, 2000, from Expanded Academic ASAP database
Web pages
In-text referencing the same as printed items, i.e., (author, date) – (Louie, 1996)
Bibliography – Author(s). (year). Title. Retrieved month day, year, from: url
<click>Louie, J. (1996). Earth’s interior. Retrieved August 13, 2002, from http://www.seismo.unr.edu/ftp/pub/louie/class/100/interior.html
No author
Some items have no author particularly web pages and newspaper
articles as well as some books
Title. (edition). (publication year). Place of Publication: Publisher.
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Concise dictionary of biology (New ed.). (1990). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
No date
Some items have no date frequent occurrence with web pages,
and does happen in printed materialUse (n.d.) for no date
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Strauss, S. (n.d.) Pilot fatigue. Retrieved July 31, 2000, from http://www.ozemail.com.au/~dxw/Pilot_Fatigue.html
Referencing in all formats
Regardless of the format you use for your assignment (essay, report, etc), you must acknowledge the sources of your information.
Most style guides do not give specific guidelines for sources in new formats (electronic), but the same principles apply.
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Referencing in Powerpoint presentations
If you quote directly from a source ( a direct quote or images) in a powerpoint slide, you always need to cite the source
usually by including a note at the bottom of the slide
try to make the text of this note quite small (but still readable), so as not to intrude too much on the content of the slide
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Referencing images
Images from sources other than clip art must be acknowledged usually with a note
under the image, whether this be in an essay, report, presentation or web page
<click>From: Cartoon. (2000). Ariadne, (24). Retrieved on August 1, 2001 from http://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue24/cartoon/