Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

MLA Style Guide 7th Edition 2009

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "MLA Style Guide 7th Edition 2009"— Presentation transcript:

1 MLA Style Guide 7th Edition 2009
Documentation MLA Style Guide 7th Edition 2009 Lockview High School, Feb. 2012

2 Lockview High School, Feb. 2012
Plagiarism Plagiarism is copying someone’s work and presenting it as your own. It’s not just about copying a friend’s essay, it’s taking another person’s ideas, words or images and using them as if they were your own creation. Even if you are putting that information into your own words, you must still acknowledge the source of that information or idea. Lockview High School, Feb. 2012

3 Lockview High School, Feb. 2012
Documentation The point of documenting your sources is not just to avoid a zero on your assignment, it’s about showing you have researched your work thoroughly. Documentation also allows your readers to look at the material you have found and used. It is important to develop good habits now when it comes to referencing the work of others. Lockview High School, Feb. 2012

4 What Should I Reference?
direct quotations paraphrases of material summaries of opinions, ideas and interpretations obtained from other sources images, video and other forms of media created by others Lockview High School, Feb. 2012

5 Lockview High School, Feb. 2012
How Do I Reference? in-text citation – in parentheses and positioned in the text of your assignment as close as possible after the information being referenced works cited list – each in-text citation will have an entry in the works cited list at the end of your assignment Lockview High School, Feb. 2012

6 Bibliography or Works Cited
A Bibliography is: an alphabetical list by author’s last name of sources; all works consulted. A Works Cited list is: an alphabetical list of sources by author’s last name; all works cited. Lockview High School, Feb. 2012

7 Lockview High School, Feb. 2012
In-Text Citations In-text citations usually: include the last name of the author(s); include the page reference; are in parentheses; are placed as close as possible following the relevant idea or quotation in the text. Example: (Crosby 116). Lockview High School, Feb. 2012

8 Lockview High School, Feb. 2012
Quotations When using a direct quote, if it is four lines or less, use quotation marks around the words of the quotation, but place final punctuation after the citation. Example: In the days when doctors “stressed air as the communicator of disease” (Tuchman 102), they were unaware of other factors. Lockview High School, Feb. 2012

9 Lockview High School, Feb. 2012
Quotations Question or exclamation marks that appear in the original source, stay within the quotation marks. Example: The more appropriate question is, “have we gone too far to reverse the environmental damage caused by reckless deforestation?” (Jones 187). Lockview High School, Feb. 2012

10 Lockview High School, Feb. 2012
Quotations If the quotation is longer than four lines: start it on a new line; indent the block one inch from the left margin (but not from the right); don’t use quotation marks; always put the final punctuation before the citation, not after; maintain the same line spacing as the main text. Lockview High School, Feb. 2012

11 How to Format the Works Cited Page
List all bibliographic references in alphabetical order by author’s last name. Set page alignment to “left”. Indent subsequent lines of an entry (called a hanging indent). Entries should be double-spaced within and between entries. Centre the title. Set margins to 1 inch. Consult “Page set-up” document on the library website. Lockview High School, Feb. 2012


Download ppt "MLA Style Guide 7th Edition 2009"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google