Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Citing References APA Style Wallace Library Copyright ©2002 Rochester Institute of Technology, Wallace Library.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Citing References APA Style Wallace Library Copyright ©2002 Rochester Institute of Technology, Wallace Library."— Presentation transcript:

1 Citing References APA Style Wallace Library Copyright ©2002 Rochester Institute of Technology, Wallace Library

2 Reasons for Citing  To give credit to originator of text or idea.  To provide source information, so reader can follow-up, if desired.

3 Definitions  In-text Citation – a brief parenthetical acknowledgement within the paper wherever another’s words, facts, or ideas have been incorporated.  Citation or Reference - information needed to properly give credit to an author and direct the reader to its location.  “Works Cited” – the list of citations that appears at the end of the paper. The citations listed are only those referred to in the paper, not everything that was reviewed.

4 Information Needed for All Citation Styles  Author or Authoring Body  Date of publication  Title of the work  Publisher of the work & place of publication  Title of the Source, if work is part of something else, i.e.. journal, encyclopedia, website  Location information within the Source, i.e.. Volume, issue #, page or paragraph numbers  Retrieval date, if electronic format

5 Accrediting Information  APA citation format was developed by the American Psychological Association.  The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association is the basis for all of the rules and examples used in this presentation.  Copies of the Manual are available at RESERVE, in the REFERENCE collection, and on the 4 th floor for checkout BF76.7.P82 2001  Short guides derived from the Manual are available in the guide rack in the Reference area of the Library and on the web at http://wally.rit.edu/pubs/guides/apa.html

6 In-text Citations  Consist of an author’s last name, publication date, and a page or paragraph number (if the reference is to a quote or specific part of a work) separated by commas.  Must be located in parentheses at the end of the quoted or borrowed information.  Must refer to a specific work listed on the “Works Cited” page at the end of the paper.

7 In-text Citation Examples  Work cited has one author In a recent study of reaction time (Rogers, 1994)…  Authors of the work cited are already mentioned in the narrative Coppola and Naturale (2001) found that…  Part of the work is quoted “A lack of career success may lower men’s value in the marketplace of relationships” (Reinking & Bell, 1991, p.368)

8 In-text Citations Which Need No “Works Cited” Entry  Work cited is an entire web site Douglass (http://douglass.speech.nwu.edu/) is a well organized site for locating American speeches. http://douglass.speech.nwu.edu/  Work cited is a personal communication: e-mail, oral interview, conversation, etc. Koren verified this (personal communication, January 9, 2002).

9 APA Formatting Rules for “Works Cited” List  Double space each entry.  Arrange entries in alphabetical order by the surname of the first author.  Entries by same author are arranged by publication date, earliest first.  If no author, the title moves to the author position and the entry is alphabetized by the first significant word of the title.

10 APA Formatting Rules for “Works Cited” Entries  First line of each entry is flush to left margin and all succeeding lines are indented. This is known as a hanging indent.  Titles of books and journals should be italicized.  Capitalize only the first word of the title, the first word after a colon or dash, and proper nouns in titles of books, articles, films and broadcasts.  Capitalize all major words and all words of four letters or more in periodical titles.

11 APA Formatting Rules for “Works Cited” Entries  Use author initials only.  Vol. # is italicized; issue # is not.  There is no period at the end of a URL in a citation. If you do not have a URL at the end, put a period there.  Put the date you retrieved the article in month day, year order followed by a comma, i.e. July 7, 2001,  Entries retrieved from RIT licensed research databases do not require a URL; use database name only.

12 General Format for Print Magazine/Journal Article Author, A. A. (Date of Publication). Title of article: Subtitle of article. Magazine/Journal Title, Volume number, (issue number only if each issue begins on page 1), pages.

13 Example of Cite for Print Magazine/Journal Article Stacks, D. W., & Hickson, M. (1991). The communication investigator: Teaching research methods to undergraduates. Communication Quarterly, 39, 351-357.

14 General Format for Book or Edited Book Author/Editor. (Date of Publication). Title: Subtitle. (Edition). Place of Publication: Publisher.

15 Example of Cite for Book or Edited Book Chickering, A. W., & Smith, L. E. (Eds.). (1981). The modern American college: Responding to the new realities of diverse students and a changing society. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

16 General Format for an Article in an Edited Book Author. (Date of Publication). Article title. In Book Editor (Ed.), Title: Subtitle. (Edition, pages). Place of Publication: Publisher.

17 Example of Cite for Article in an Edited Book Good, T. L., & Brophy, J. E. (1986). School effects. In M. C. Wittrock (Ed.), Handbook of research on teaching (3rd ed., pp. 570- 602). New York: Macmillan.

18 General Format for Internet Document Circles represent pieces of info that need to be located on the electronic document Author/editor. (Year/Date). Title. Retrieved Date, from URL Date, from URL

19

20

21 Example of Cite for Internet Document Bryant, P. (2001). Biodiversity and conservation. Retrieved November 26, 2001, from http://darwin.bio.uci. edu/~sustain/ bio65/Titlpage.htm

22 General Format for an Internet Document Which Is Part of an Internet Resource Author/editor. (Year). Title. Retrieved date, from web site name: URL

23

24

25

26

27 Example of a Cite for an Internet Document Which Is Part of an Internet Resource Pellegrino, J. (n.d.). Seamus Heaney. Retrieved October 4, 1999, from the Internet Poetry Archive web site: http://www.ibiblio.org/dykki/poetry/ heaney/heaney.bio.html

28 General Format for an Article From an Internet Journal Author. (Year). Title of article. Source, vol. #, (issue # if each issue is separately numbered), pages. Retrieved date, from URL

29

30 Example of a Cite for an Article From an Internet Journal Fine, M.A., & Kurdek, L.A. (1993). Reflections on determining authorship credit and authorship order on faculty-student collaborations. American Psychologist, 48, 1141-47. Retrieved June 7, 1999, from http://www.apa.org/ journals/amp/kurdek.html

31 General Format for an Article From an Electronic Database Author. (Year). Title of article. Source, vol. #, (issue # if each issue is separately numbered), pages. Retrieved date, from Database. Author. (Year). Title of article. Source, vol. #, (issue # if each issue is separately numbered), pages. Retrieved date, from Database.

32

33

34 Example of a Cite for an Article From an Electronic Database Kramer, J.F. (December 1999/January 2000). Valuing accounting practices. The National Public Accountant, 44 (10), 32. Retrieved April 4, 2000, from ABI/Inform Global via Proquest Direct.

35 Other Formats  MLA – Modern Language Association  Chicago Style – Chicago Manual of Style  Turabian Style – based on Chicago Style  Harvard Referencing System  ASA – American Sociological Association  CBE - Council of Biology Editors See Formats for Citing References guide at http://wally.rit.edu/pubs/guides/cite.html for info on these formats and others

36 Bibliographic Management Software  Software that collects & organizes citations for a bibliography and puts it into a specific style. Often includes filters that work with specific databases.  Examples: Endnote, ProCite, Reference Manager, Papyrus  Comparison information & links to trial versions, company websites with purchasing info, use guides & tutorials are available from the website at http://wally.rit.edu/ http://wally.rit.edu/ internet/subject/writing.html internet/subject/writing.html

37 Writing Resources on the Web http://wally.rit.edu/internet/subject/writing.html This website includes links to  Referencing & citing guides with examples  Grammar guides and tutorials  Term paper writing workshops and guides  Bibliographic management software info

38 ? Exercise

39 Correct Citations for Exercise Persico, J. E. (2001). Roosevelt’s secret war: FDR and World War II espionage. New York: Random House.

40 Correct Citation for Exercise Cullhed, A. (August 28, 2001). Nobel prize authors on time. Retrieved February 18, 2002, from the Nobel e-Museum: http://www.nobel.se/literature/articles/ cullhed/


Download ppt "Citing References APA Style Wallace Library Copyright ©2002 Rochester Institute of Technology, Wallace Library."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google