Referencing using Harvard Style

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Education 2012 Presented by Marina Ward. Online Catalogue: Searching the Catalogue PIN Reading History How to find journal articles (2 nd Term)
Advertisements

Referencing Library and Learning Centre. Why should you give references? Fully acknowledge others work/ideas/inventions Show the breadth of your research.
Introduction to Referencing. Referencing your work What this session will cover: What is referencing? Why do we reference? References in the text of your.
GROUP MEMBERS: 1.AYESHA KHALID 2.NIRMAL TARIQ 3.MADIHA AURANGZAIB REFERENCING STYLES IN RESEARCH PAPER.
Referencing, NOT Plagiarising!. Outline Referencing Citations Creating a reference list Plagiarism Recognising what it is How to avoid it.
1 Referencing, avoiding plagiarism and using Turnitin Laura Jeffrey (University Library) Mike Cameron (Learning Technologies Team) 16th July 2009.
An Introduction to Referencing ©The Learning Quality Support Unit, 2013.
Referencing: a short quiz Nancy Graham Learning Advisor (Medicine) July 2006.
Harvard Referencing
PLAGIARISM Sixth Form Induction.
APA Citation Style & Avoiding Plagiarism Jennifer Adams Vaughan Memorial Library Room 425, 2 nd floor
REFERENCING GUIDE REFERENCING GUIDE ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW FOR YOUR ASSIGNMENTS… Fiona Maistry
References & Bibliographies. What you will learn: What are references & bibliographies. Why provide references & bibliographies. Different styles of references.
Slide 1 School of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science Basics of IEEE referencing system.
Why is Referencing Important? Referencing shows that you are academically honest Referencing enables an interesting reader to find out more about what.
Bibliographies & Footnotes Waid Academy Library, May 2009.
How to Write a Reference List?. What is referencing? A standard method to acknowledge the sources of information and ideas you have used in an assignment.
This is a guide to citing in a text only. There are further guides on Writing a bibliography and related issues.
Harvard Referencing and Bibliographies. Aims WHAT they are. Their PURPOSE. HOW to create one. WHERE to place one within your assignment.
APA Referencing.
Harvard Referencing.
Referencing.
LRJJ Official Referencing Style. Objectives To discourage plagiarism. To teach students correct referencing. To ensure APA referencing.
Library training, Part II Justin Hodds Subject Librarian for Education Psychology.
University of Sunderland CSEM03 R.E.P.L.I. Unit 6 Plagiarism CSEM03 REPLI.
Referencing. What is referencing ? Referencing, or citing, means acknowledging all sources of information and ideas you have used in your assignment.
Standing on the Shoulders of Giants. Today… Acknowledging sources Plagiarism Referencing systems UCL resources Getting it right.
References and citations explained. Learning outcomes You will know why correct referencing is essential You will know what citations are and when and.
1 Learning Resource Centre Harvard Referencing: A Guide.
How do I reference my sources? What does this mean? Why reference? It shows that you have gathered a range of information, considered it, added your own.
Referencing & Bibliography Guide. Referencing Citing in your coursework acknowledges the publications where you obtained information. A reference list.
Referencing Skills Academic Study Skills. Aims of session are to raise awareness: of the importance of using the correct reference system at University.
A Guide to Referencing For Leisure Studies LRC – Autumn 2015.
Harvard is one of the two main styles of referencing, the other is Numeric There are two main differences between the Numeric and Harvard style: 1. The.
Referencing your work Michael Veitch Senior Information Adviser
Referencing NOT Plagiarising! Based on Referencing not Plagiarising, University of Manchester.
Academic writing and the Transition from Further Education to Higher Education Jayne Foley and Gina Newbury June 2015.
Writing a Reference List A Presentation from the Sawle Literature and Research Centre (SLRC)
Writing a Research Paper for Publication Referencing a Work Guide for preparing and writing paper, review and publication Bobby D. Gerardo, Ph.D. PSITE.
How to reference and avoid plagiarism
Making sense of your reading list
Introduction to referencing
By Kelley Moody BSN, RN Graduate Student
APA Citations - Overview
APA Format Crediting sources
Referencing & Bibliographies
Helping you to produce your History Added Value Unit
Referencing and plagiarism
References & Citations
Referencing By Andreas Grondoudis.
What do you do when you want to use someone else’s words?
How to do a bibliography
Preliminaries COUNT OFF 1, 2, 3, 4 Log on to computer
Plagiarism and Referencing
How to reference and avoid plagiarism
REFERENCE PROPERLY AND AVOID PLAGIARISM
By Kelley Moody BSN, RN Graduate Student
References and citations explained
MLA Format MLA Format  Titles, Headings, Margins, In-text citations, Formatting Quotations and creating a Works cited .
This PowerPoint will help you prepare citations following the Harvard System of Referencing.
The documentation format of the Modern Language Association
APA Citation Style & Avoiding Plagiarism
Referencing UCD Access.
Referencing Harvard Style.
HRMT20028 – Organisational Change Management
The documentation format of the Modern Language Association
Recording information
How to write a good APA reference
Writing a Reference List
Citing and Referencing 2 minute basics
Presentation transcript:

Referencing using Harvard Style Why should you reference? In academic writing you will be expected to refer to the work of those who have done research in your subject area. It is important that you acknowledge their work and contribution otherwise you leave yourself open to accusations of plagiarism – and you could be disciplined for it.

Referencing using Harvard Style Why should you reference? Referencing illustrates your understanding of key concepts being discussed in the body of literature on the subject matter. It adds credibility to your work. IF YOU DO NOT REFERENCE YOUR WORK IT WILL FAIL. There are a number of referencing systems, here at UWS we use the Harvard Style of Referencing.

Referencing using Harvard Style References should be inserted into your work at the point where you want to refer to the work of someone else. References need to be given each time you cite an author, this enables those who read your work to trace back to the work you are referring to. The Harvard Referencing System is an agreed standard used by many academics and it ensure that references are presented in a clear and unambiguous way.

Referencing using Harvard Style So what is referencing? Citing Formally recognising your sources of research Citations The words/passages quoted in the text of your essays/reports/presentations.

Referencing using Harvard Style Bibliography & References Bibliographies Anything you read/watched/sourced in the process of your research – even if you do not directly refer to it in your work. References These are the sources you specifically refer to in your work. It is imperative that all pieces of academic work have references – bibliographies are optional but do illustrate the amount of work you have done.

Referencing using Harvard Style In the text of an essay of piece of work there are a range of ways of presenting references to other work. For example: Illeris (2007) discusses the development of the wide body of research into learning and points to the work of Jean Piaget and his assertions that the body has a role to play in learning and that tiredness, hunger and worry manifest themselves as a tension that can have an effect on learning.

Referencing using Harvard Style Or: The work of Marton & Saljo in the late 1970s that identified surface and deep approaches to learning. Surface approaches arise from an intention to ‘get the task out of the way with the minimum of trouble, while appearing to meet the requirements’ (Briggs 2001, p11). If you refer to this work again, in the same paragraph and before you refer to anything else you use: Biggs (ibid) states that the deep learning approach manifests itself in a desire and ability to ‘focus at a high conceptual level’.

Referencing using Harvard Style However, when you refer to these works in the references at the end of your essay or piece of research, you present far more information about the work. Biggs, J. (2001) Teaching for Quality Learning at University. Maidenhead:  Open University Press.  This is the reference style for a book, but there are styles for different resources.

Referencing using Harvard Style How to reference a book Author’s surname followed by a comma Author’s initials in capitals, with a full stop after each and a final comma Year of publication (in brackets) Full title of the book underlined and followed by a full stop Edition number followed by abbreviation ‘ed.’followed by a full stop. Place of publication: town or city, followed by a colon Publisher - company name followed by a full stop Williams, S. and Adam-Smith, D. (2006) Contemporary employment relations: a critical introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Referencing using Harvard Style How to reference a journal article Author’s surname followed by a comma Author’s initials in capitals, with a full stop after each and a final comma Year of publication (in brackets) Full title of the article - not in italics, with capitalisation of first word and proper nouns only - followed by a full stop Full title of the journal, underlined, with capitalisation of key words and followed by a comma. Volume number Issue/Part number in brackets, followed by comma Page range preceded by ‘pp.’ Grant, B. (2005) Fighting for space in supervision: fantasies, fairytales, fictions and fallacies. International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, Vol. 18 (3), pp337-354.

Referencing using Harvard Style How to reference a chapter in a book: Chapter Author’s surname followed by a comma Author’s initials in capitals, with a full stop after each and a final comma Year of publication (in brackets) Title of the chapter followed by word ‘in’ Full title of the book underlined and followed by a full stop (contd on next slide)

Referencing using Harvard Style How to reference a chapter in a book: Edition number followed by abbreviation ‘ed.’followed by a full stop. Place of publication: town or city, followed by a colon Publisher - company name followed by a full stop Ketteridge, S. and Shiach, M. (2009) ‘Supervising Research Students’ in Fry, H., Ketteridge, S. and Marshall, S. (eds) A Handbook for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education. Abingdon: Routledge. pp 166-186.

Referencing using Harvard Style Pages from the Internet Author or source Year (in brackets) Title of web document or page - underlined followed by a full stop Available followed by a colon and the URL Date of most recent access - in square brackets followed by a full stop. Health Scotland (2007) NHS Health Scotland [Online]. Available: http://www.healthscotland.com [1 October 2016].

Referencing using Harvard Style Electronic Journal from a Database Is similar in style to accessing a web page. Gunther, M., Evans, G., Mefford, L. et al. (2007) The relationship between leadership styles and empathy among student nurses. Nursing Outlook [Online], Vol. 55(4), p. 196. Available: ProQuest [25 April 2016].

Referencing using Harvard Style Referring to conference proceedings Author’s surname followed by a comma Authors initials in capitals, with a full stop after each - and a final comma Year of publication in brackets Full title of conference paper underlined with capitalisation of first word and proper nouns only, followed by a comma Full title of conference, followed by a comma Location, followed by a comma Date followed by a comma

Referencing using Harvard Style Referencing conference proceedings Publisher (company name) followed by a colon Place of publication (town or city) followed by a full stop Levinson, A.A. (2007) Mission to Mars and beyond, Proceedings of the Apollo II lunar science conference, London August 7-9, 2007. London: Pergamon Press.

Referencing using Harvard Style The UWS guide to referencing also covers a huge range of other sources that you can look at for guidance. It isavailable on Moodle for all students to access, as well as being accessible on the UWS Library website. REFERENCES must also be provided at the end of an essay or research report, so that the reader can access the information in one place.

Plagiarism What is plagiarism? It is stealing other people’s work or ideas and presenting them as your own. It is not referencing other people’s theories or facts. If you plagiarise you will probably be found out and you will face severe penalties.

Plagiarism So, how to avoid plagiarism? Never be tempted to buy essays online! Don’t copy and paste from websites. Don’t copy and paste from your pal’s work! Don’t share your work with others before submission unless you are completely sure you can trust the other person not to copy.

Plagiarism You can plagiarise by accident – simply due to not being fully prepared to write your essay. You have not acquired enough knowledge to enable you to write confidently about it. Try to avoid using the author’s words – write your own views/opinions on these. If you do lapse into paraphrasing then you MUST include a reference.

Plagiarism How do we know that it has been plagiarised? Sudden, but obvious, changes in the writing style and flow of the writing. Plagiarism software is used on a sample of all essays. Students have even been know to forget to remove the URLs etc from work that has been copied online!

Plagiarism How do we know that it has been plagiarised? Although you will not submit your final dissertation through Turnitin, it will be set up so that you can run your own work through this and ensure that you have not plagiarised. If you are found to have plagiarised, your work will fail.

Getting advice & support As well as lecturing staff being able to advise and guide you on this aspect of your work, library services can also assist. There is some great advice and guidance on the UWS Library website at: http://www.uws.ac.uk/about-uws/services-for- students/library/guides-and-online-help/ Learn how to do this well and you will produce good work throughout your degree.

Getting advice & support Class task 2: October 4, 2016 You have been provided with a range of references – which are correct and which are wrong?