 |
| Citation Examples: APA and
MLA Style |

Previous
|
|

Next |
For more examples, please see the complete Citation Resources & Guides provided by UMUC Information and Library Services.
APA MLA
|
|
| APA Style |
Gruber,
S. (1998). Coming to terms with contradictions: Online
materials, plagiarism, and the writing center. Writing
Center Journal, 19(1),
49-72. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then initial(s). If there is more than one initial, put a space
between them.
- Give the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a period.
- Capitalize the first word in the article title and subtitles; the rest should be in
lower case except for proper nouns.
- Follow the article title with a period.
- Capitalize
all words in the journal or magazine titles except
stop words like and, the, a, of, etc.
- Follow the journal title with a comma.
- Italicize name of the journal and volume number.
- Give issue number if available in parentheses, no space between the volume and the issue
number.
- Do not italicize the issue number. Ex. Writing Center Journal, 19(1).
- Give page numbers without p. or pp. If possible give the start and end page numbers. Ex.
49-72.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
| MLA Style* |
Gruber, Sibylle. Coming
to Terms with Contradictions: Online Materials, Plagiarism,
and the Writing Center.
Writing Center, Journal 19.1 (1998):
49-72. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then first name spelled out.
- Put
a period after the authors first name or middle
initial.
- Put
the article title in quotes. Put the period inside
the close quotes. Ex. Coming to Terms with Contradictions:
Online Materials, Plagiarism, and the Writing Center.
- Capitalize
the main words in the article title and subtitle except
stop words like and, the, a, of, etc.
- Underline the journal or magazine title. Ex. Writing Center Journal
- Capitalize
all words in journal or magazine titles except stop
words like and, the, a, of, etc.
- Do not put a period or comma after the name of the journal.
- Put the volume and issue number separated by a period..
- Put the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a colon. Ex. (1998):
- Give the page numbers without p. or pp. If possible give the start and end page numbers.
Ex. 49-72.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
Love, P.
G., & Simmons,
J. (1998). Factors influencing cheating and plagiarism
among graduate students in a college of education. College
Student Journal, 32(4), 539-550. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then initial(s). If there is more than one initial, put a space
between them. Ex. Love, P. G.
- Separate
the authors names with a comma and the symbol "&".
- Give the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a period.
- Capitalize the first word in the article title and subtitles; the rest should be in
lower case except for proper nouns.
- Follow the article title with a period
- Capitalize
all words in the journal or magazine titles except
stop words like and, the, a, of, etc.
- Follow the journal title with a comma.
- Italicize name of the journal and volume number.
- Give issue number if available in parentheses, followed by a comma, no space between the
volume and issue number.
- Do not italicize the issue number. Ex. College Student Journal, 32(4),
- Give page numbers without p. or pp. If possible give the start and end page numbers. Ex.
539-550.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
| MLA Style* |
Love, Patrick G. and Janice Simmons. Factors
Influencing Cheating and Plagiarism among Graduate Students in a College
of Education. College Student Journal 32.4 (1998): 539-550.
|
Tips:
- For the first author, give last name first, then first name spelled out.
- For the second author, give the first name first and the last name
last, followed by a period. Ex. Love, Patrick G. and Janice Simmons.
- Separate
the authors names with the word "and," not
"&". Ex. Love, Paul and John
Simmons.
- Put
the article title in quotes. Put the period inside
the close quotes. Ex. Factors Influencing Cheating
and Plagiarism among Graduate Students in a College
of Education.
- Capitalize
the main words in the article title and subtitle except
stop words like and, the, a, of, etc.
- Underline the title of the journal.
- Capitalize
all words in journal or magazine titles except stop
words like and, the, a, of, etc.
- Do not put a period after the name of the journal.
- Put the volume and issue number separated by a period. Do not italicize. Ex. College
Student Journal 32.4
- Put the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a colon. Ex: (1998):
- Give the page numbers without p. or pp. If possible give the start and end page numbers.
Ex. 539-550.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
Groark, M., Oblinger, D. & Choa, M. (2001). Term
paper mills, anti-plagiarism tools, and academic integrity. Educause
Review, 36(5),
40-43. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then initial(s). If there is more than one initial, put a space
between them.
- Separate
all the authors names with a comma but use the symbol "&"
before the last authors name.
- If
there are six authors or less, name them all. If there
are more than six authors, then after the sixth author
add the words et al.
- Give the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a period.
- Capitalize the first word in the article title and subtitles; the rest should be in
lower case except for proper nouns.
- Follow the article title with a period.
- Capitalize
all words in the journal or magazine titles except
stop words like and, the, a, of, etc.
- Follow the journal title with a comma.
- Italicize name of the journal and volume number.
- Give issue number if available in parentheses, followed by a comma, no space after the
volume number.
- Do not italicize the issue number. Ex. Educause Review, 36(5).
- Give page numbers without p. or pp. If possible give the start and end page numbers. Ex.
40-43.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
| MLA Style* |
Groark, Marie, Diana Oblinger, and Miranda
Choa. Term Paper Mills, Anti-Plagiarism Tools, and Academic Integrity.
Educause Review 36.5 (2001): 40-43. |
Tips:
- For the first author, give last name first, then first name spelled out.
- For the second, third, and fourth authors, give the first name first
and the last name last, followed by a period. Ex. Groark, Marie, Diana
Oblinger, and Miranda Choa.
- If
there are four authors or less, separate the first
three with commas. Separate the fourth author with
the word "and", not "&".
- If
there are four or less authors, name them all. If there
are more than four, give the name of the first author
followed by the words et
al. or by and others.
- Put a period after the last named author if there are four or less.
- Put
the article title in quotes. Put the period inside
the close quotes. Ex. Term
Paper Mills, Anti-Plagiarism Tools, and Academic
Integrity.
- Capitalize
the main words in the article title and subtitle except
stop words like and, the, a, of, etc.
- Underline the title of the journal
- Capitalize
all words in journal or magazine titles except stop
words like and, the, a, of, etc.
- Do not put a period after the name of the journal.
- Put the volume and issue number separated by a period. Do not italicize. Ex. Educause
Review 36.5
- Put the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a colon.
- Give the page numbers without p. or pp. If possible give the start and end page numbers.
Ex. 40-43.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
Recent developments in the law: Universities and other
institutions
of higher learning. (1999). Journal of Law and Education, 28, 586. |
Tips:
- Give the title of the article first. Capitalize the first word in the article title and
subtitles; the rest should be in lower case except for proper nouns.
- Follow the article title with a period.
- Give the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a period.
- Capitalize all words in the journal or magazine titles except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Follow the journal title with a comma.
- Italicize name of the journal and volume number.
- Give issue number if available in parentheses, followed by a comma, no space after the
volume number. Ex. Journal of Law and Education, 28
- Give page numbers without p. or pp. If possible give the start and end page numbers. Ex.
586.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
| MLA Style* |
"Recent Developments in the Law: Universities and
other Institutions of Higher Learning." Journal of Law and Education 28
(1999): 586. |
Tips:
- Give the title of the article first.
- Put the article title in quotes. Put the period inside the close quotes. Ex. Term
Paper Mills, Anti-Plagiarism Tools, and Academic Integrity.
- Capitalize the main words in the article title and subtitle except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Underline the title of the journal.
- Capitalize all words in journal or magazine titles except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Do not put a period after the name of the journal.
- Put the volume and issue number separated by a period. Do not italicize. Ex. Journal
of Law and Education 28.
- Put the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a colon
- Give the page numbers without p. or pp. If possible give the start and end page numbers.
Ex. 586.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
Tenpenny,
P. L., Keriazakos, M. S., Lew, G. S., &
Phelan, T. P. (1998). In search of inadvertent
plagiarism. American Journal
of Psychology, 111(4), 529-559. Retrieved
July 1, 2002, from Expanded Academic Index ASAP database. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then initial(s).
- Separate the authors names with a comma and the symbol "&".
- Give the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a period.
- Capitalize the first word in the article title and subtitles; the rest should be in
lower case except for proper nouns.
- Follow the article title with a period.
- Capitalize all words in the journal or magazine titles except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Follow the journal title with a comma.
- Italicize name of the journal and volume number.
- Give issue number if available in parentheses, no space after the volume number.
- Do not italicize the issue number.
- Give page numbers without p. or pp. If possible give the start and end page numbers. Ex.
529-559.
- Add the words Retrieved from then the date of retrieval; spell out the
month, give the date followed by a comma, then the year.
- After the date of retrieval add the words from, then the name of the
database it was retrieved from, followed by the word database. Ex. Retrieved
July 1, 2002 from Expanded Academic Index ASAP database.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
| MLA Style* |
Tenpenny, Patricia, et al. In Search of Inadvertent
Plagiarism. American Journal of Psychology 111.4 (1998):
529-559. Expanded
Academic Index ASAP. Gale. UMUC Information and Library Services,
Adelphi, MD. 1 Jul. 2002 <http://www.galegroup.com/>.
|
Tips:
- Give last name first, then first name spelled out.
- Separate the authors names with the word "and," not
"&".
- If there are four or less authors, name them all. If there are more than four, give the
name of the first author followed by the words et al. or by and
others. Do not add a period after the words et al.
- Put a period after the last named author if there are four or less.
- Put the article title in quotes. Put the period inside the close quotes. Ex. In
Search of Inadvertent Plagiarism.
- Capitalize the main words in the article title and subtitle except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Underline the title of the journal.
- Capitalize all words in journal or magazine titles except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Do not put a period after the name of the journal.
- Put the volume and issue number separated by a period. Ex. American Journal of
Psychology 111.4
- Put the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a colon.
- Give the page numbers without p. or pp. If possible give the start and end page numbers.
Ex. 529-559.
- Give the name of the database it was retrieved from, underlined, followed by a period.
Ex. Expanded Academic Index ASAP. Do not add the word database as you
did with APA.
- Add the name of the database vendor or supplier, followed by a period. If the name of
the database vendor or supplier is not apparent to you, contact your librarian for
assistance.
- Give the date of retrieval in this format: the date, the month abbreviated then the
year. Do not separate with a comma. Ex. 1 Jul. 2002.
- Give the URL where you entered the database. Ex. <http://www.galegroup.com>.
- Begin and end with brackets < and >.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
Gilbert, S. (2002, January). Achieving the
embarrassment level, Syllabus Magazine. Retrieved April 16, 2002,
from http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5919 |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then initial(s).
- Separate the authors names with a comma, and use "&"
before the name of the last author.
- Give the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a period. If the month of
publication is provided, add it.
- Capitalize the first word in the title and subtitles; the rest should be in lower case
except for proper nouns.
- Capitalize all words in journal or magazine titles except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Italicize name of the journal and volume number.
- Give issue number if available in parentheses, no space after the volume number, and not
in italics, followed by a period. If there are no volume or issue numbers, put a period
after the name of the journal.
- Give the date you retrieved that article, ex. April 16, 2002.
- Give the URL where you located the article, ex. http://www.syllabus.com/
syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5919
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
| MLA Style* |
Gilbert, Steven. Achieving the Embarrassment
Level. Syllabus Magazine (2002): 16 Apr.
2002 <http://www.syllabus.com/syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5919>. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then first name spelled out.
- Separate the authors names with the word "and", not
"&".
- If there are four or less authors, name them all. If there are more than four, give the
name of the first author followed by the words et al. or by and
others.
- Put a period after the last named author if there are four or less. Do not add a period
after the words et al.
- Put the article title in quotes. Put the period inside the close quotes. Ex.
Achieving the Embarrassment Level.
- Capitalize the main words in the article title and subtitle except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Underline the title of the journal.
- Capitalize all words in journal or magazine titles except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Do not put a period after the name of the journal.
- Put the volume and issue number separated by a period.
- Put the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a colon. Ex. (2002):
- Give the page numbers without p. or pp. If possible give the start and end page numbers.
- Give the date of retrieval in this format: the date, the month abbreviated then the
year. Do not separate with a comma. Ex. 16 Apr. 2002.
- Give the URL where you found the article. Ex. <http://www.syllabus.com/
syllabusmagazine/article.asp?id=5919>. Begin and end with brackets < and >.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
Lathrop, A. & Foss, K. (2001). Student cheating
and plagiarism in the Internet era: A wake-up call. Englewood, CO: Libraries
Unlimited. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then initial(s).
- Give the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a period.
- Separate names with a common, and use & before the name of the last author.
- Capitalize the first word in the title and subtitles; the rest should be in lower case
except for proper nouns. Ex. Student cheating and plagiarism in the Internet era: A wake
up call.
- Put the place of publication. Give the city, then comma, then postal code for the state,
followed by a colon. Ex. Englewood, CO:
- Put the name of the publisher followed by a period. The
complete publishing information looks like this: Ex. Englewood,
CO: Libraries Unlimited.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
| MLA Style* |
Lathrop, Ann and Kathleen Foss. Student
Cheating and Plagiarism in the Internet Era: A Wake-Up Call. Englewood, CO: Libraries Unlimited, 2001. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then first name spelled out.
- Separate the authors names with the word "and" not
"&".
- If there are four or less authors, name them all. If there are more than four, give the
name of the first author followed by the words et al. or by and
others.
- Put a period after the last named author if there are four or less. Do not add a period
after the words et al.
- Underline the title of the book.
- Capitalize all words in the book title except stop words like and,
the, a, of, etc.
- Put a period after the title of the book. Ex. Student Cheating and Plagiarism in the
Internet Era: A Wake-Up Call.
- Put the place of publication. Give the city, then comma, then postal code for the state,
followed by a colon. Ex. Englewood, CO:
- Put the name of the publisher, followed by a comma then the year of publication,
followed by a period. The publishing information looks like this: Ex. Englewood, CO:
Libraries Unlimited, 2001.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
McCabe, D. L., & Pavela, G.R. (1998). The effect
of institutional policies and procedures on academic integrity. In D. Burnett, & L.
Rudolph (Eds.), Academic integrity vs. the academic dishonesty of college students
(pp. 75-94). Washington, DC: National Association of Student Personnel Administrators. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then initial(s), of the chapter
author(s). Separate names with a comma, and use "&"
before the name of the last author
- Give the year of publication in parentheses, followed
by a period.
- Give editor(s) name with initial first and last name second.
- Use Ed. for one editor or Eds. for multiple editors and
put in parentheses, followed by a comma. Ex. In D. Burnett,
& L. Rudolph (Eds.),
- Capitalize the first word in the title and subtitles;
the rest should be in lower case except for proper nouns.
- Italicize the title of the book.
- Give the page numbers of the chapter, beginning with pp.,
in parentheses, followed by a period. The title and page
numbers looks like this. Ex. Academic integrity vs. the
academic dishonesty of college students (pp. 75-94).
- Put the place of publication. Give the city, then comma,
then postal code for the state, followed by a colon. Ex.
Washington, DC:
- Put the name of the publisher followed by a period. The
complete publishing information looks like this: Ex. Washington,
DC: National Association of Student Personnel Administrators.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
| MLA Style* |
McCabe, Donald and Gary Pavela. The Effect of
Institutional Policies and Procedures on Academic Integrity.
Academic Integrity
vs. the Academic Dishonesty of College Students. Ed. Dorothy Burnett and Laura
Rudolph. Washington, D.C.: National Association of Student Personnel and Administrators,
1998. 75-94. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then first name spelled out.
- Separate the authors names with the word "and"
not "&".
- If there are four or less authors, name them all. If there
are more than four, give the name of the first author followed
by the words et al. or by and others
- Put a period after the last named author if there are
four or less. Do not add a period after the words et
al.
- Underline the title of the book.
- Capitalize all words in the book title except stop words
like and, the, a, of,
etc.
- Put a period after the title of the book.
- Use Ed. And name the editor(s), first name first, lastname
last, followed by a period. Ex. Dorothy Burnett and Laura
Rudolph.
- Put the place of publication. Give the city, then comma,
then postal code for the state, followed by a colon. Ex.
Washington, D.C.:
- Put the name of the publisher, followed by a comma then
the year of publication, followed by a period. The publishing
information looks like this: Ex. Washington, D.C.: National
Association of Student Personnel and Administrators, 1998.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
Haas, M. F. (1995, March 23-25). The undergraduate
research paper: Teaching ethical relationships. Paper presented at the Conference
on College Composition and Communication, Washington, DC. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then initial(s), of the author(s).
- Separate names with a comma, and use "&" before the name of the last
author.
- Give the date of the conference in parentheses, followed by a period. If the start and
end date are provided, you should include them after the year. Ex. (1995, March 23-25).
- Capitalize the first word in the title and subtitles; the rest should be in lower case
except for proper nouns.
- Put the title of the paper in italics followed by a period.
- Give the name and location of the conference followed by a period. Begin with
Paper presented at
Ex. Paper presented at the Conference on College
Composition and Communication, Washington, DC.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
| MLA Style* |
Haas, Molly F. The Undergraduate
Research Paper: Teaching Ethical Relationships. Conference on College
Composition and Communication. Washington, DC. 23-25 Mar. 1995. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then first name spelled out.
- Separate the authors names with the word "and," not
"&".
- If there are four or less authors, name them all. If there are more than four, give the
name of the first author followed by the words et al. or by and
others.
- Put a period after the last named author if there are four or less. Do not add a period
after the words et al.
- Put the paper title in quotes. Put the period inside the close quotes. Ex. The
Undergraduate Research Paper: Teaching Ethical Relationships.
- Capitalize the main words in the article title and subtitle except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Give the name and location of the conference followed by a period. Do not begin with
Paper presented at as in APA style. Ex. Conference on College Composition and
Communication, Washington, DC.
- Put the date of the conference. If the start and end date are provided, you should
include them. Use this format: the date(s), no comma, the month abbreviated, no comma, the
year, then period. Ex. 23-25 Mar. 1995.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
Joyce, K. P., Johnson, M., McCulley, L., Outland, J.,
& White, F. (2000, October). Collaborative partnerships to support faculty
development in the information age. Paper presented at the ACM Special Interest Group on University and College Computing Services, New York. Retrieved November 28, 2001, from
ACM Digital Library database. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then initial(s), of the author(s).
- Separate names with a comma, and use "&" before the name of the last
author.
- Give the date of the conference in parentheses, followed by a period. If the start and
end date are provided, you should include them.
- Capitalize the first word in the title and subtitles; the rest should be in lower case
except for proper nouns.
- Put the title of the paper in italics followed by a period.
- Give the name and location of the conference followed by a period. Begin with
Paper presented at
Ex. Paper presented at the ACM Special Interest
Group on University and College Computing Services, New York.
- Give the date you retrieved the paper, Ex. November 28, 2001
- Give the name of the database you retrieved it from, ex. ACM Digital Library database.
Ex. Retrieved November 28, 2001 from ACM Digital Library database.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
| MLA Style* |
Joyce, Kimberlye P., et al. Collaborative Partnerships to Support
Faculty Development in the Information Age. ACM Special Interest
Group on University and College Computing Services, New York. Oct. 2000
ACM Digital Library. Association for Computing Machinery UMUC
Information and Library Services, Adelphi, MD. 28 Nov. 2001
|
Tips:
- Give last name first, then first name spelled out.
- Separate the authors names with the word "and," not
"&".
- If there are four or less authors, name them all. If there are more than four, give the
name of the first author followed by the words et al. or by and
others.
- Put a period after the last named author if there are four or less. Do not add a period
after the words et al.
- Put the paper title in quotes. Put the period inside the close quotes. Ex.
Collaborative Partnerships to Support Faculty Development in the Information
Age.
- Capitalize the main words in the article title and subtitle except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Give the name and location of the conference followed by a period. Do not begin with
Paper presented at as in APA style. Ex. ACM Special Interest Group on
University and College Computing Services, New York.
- Put the date of the conference. If the start and end date are provided, you should
include them. Use this format: the date(s), the month abbreviated, no comma, the year, no
period. Ex. Oct. 2000
- Give the name of the database it was retrieved from, underlined, followed by a period.
Ex. ACM Digital Library. Do not add the word database as you did with
APA.
- Add the name of the database vendor or supplier, followed by a period. If the name of
the database vendor or supplier is not apparent to you, contact your librarian for
assistance.
- Give the date you retrieved that paper in this format: the date, the month abbreviated,
then the year, no period or comma. Ex. 28 Nov. 2001
- Give the URL for entering the database. Ex.
- Begin and end with brackets < and >.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
Benbunan-Fich, R., Hiltz, S.R., & Turoff, M.
(2001). A comparative content analysis of face-to-face vs. ALN-mediated teamwork.
Paper presented at the 34th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences,
Maui. Retrieved November 8, 2001
from http://computer.org/Proceedings/hicss/0981/Volume%201/09811009abs.htm. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then initial(s), of the author(s).
- Separate names with a comma, and use "&" before the name of the last
author.
- Capitalize the first word in the title and subtitles; the rest should be in lower case
except for proper nouns.
- Put the title of the paper in italics followed by a period.
- Give the date of the conference in parentheses, followed by a period. If the start and
end date are provided, you should include them.
- Give the name of the organization as the author.
- Give the name and location of the conference followed by a period. Begin with
Paper presented at
Ex. Paper presented at the 34th Hawaii International
Conference on System Sciences, Maui.
- Give the date you retrieved that paper.
- Give the URL where you located the paper. Ex. Retrieved November 8, 2001 from
http://computer.org/Proceedings/ hicss/0981/Volume%201/09811009abs. htm
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- Do not end citation with a period for this instance.
|
| MLA Style* |
Benbunan-Fich, Raquel, Starr Roxanne Hiltz,
and Murray Turoff. A Comparative Analysis of Face-to-Face vs. ALN-Mediated
Teamwork. 34th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences,
Maui, HI. 3 Jan.
2001. 8 Nov. 2001 <http://computer.org/Proceedings/hicss/0981/Volume%201/09811009abs.htm>.
|
Tips:
- Give last name first, then first name spelled out.
- Separate the authors names with the word "and," not
"&".
- If there are four or less authors, name them all. If there are more than four, give the
name of the first author followed by the words et al. or by and
others.
- Put a period after the last named author if there are four or less. Do not add a period
after the words et al.
- Put the paper title in quotes. Put the period inside the close quotes. Ex. A
Comparative Analysis of Face-to-Face vs. ALN-Mediated Teamwork.
- Capitalize the main words in the article title and subtitle except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Give the name and location of the conference followed by a period. Do not begin with
Paper presented at as in APA style. Ex. 34th Hawaii International Conference
on System Sciences, Maui, HI.
- Put the date of the conference. If the start and end date are provided, you should
include them. Use this format: the date(s), the month abbreviated, no comma, the year, no
period. Ex. 3 Jan. 2001
- Give the date you retrieved that paper in this format: the date, the month abbreviated,
then the year, no period or comma. Ex. 8 Nov. 2001
- Give the URL where you retrieved the paper. Ex.<http://computer.org/Proceedings/
hicss/0981/Volume%201/ 09811009abs. htm>. Begin and end with brackets < and >.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
Jenkins, T. S. (1992). Identification and
classification of the reasons given by college students for why plagiarism is wrong and
a description of how college students respond to explanations and statements about
plagiarism. Unpublished dissertation, Michigan State University. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then initial(s), of the author(s).
- Give the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a period.
- Capitalize the first word in the title and subtitles; the rest should be in lower case
except for proper nouns.
- Put the title of the dissertation or thesis in italics, followed by a period. Ex. Identification
and classification of the reasons given by college students for why plagiarism is wrong
and a description of how college students respond to explanations and statements about
plagiarism.
- Use the phrase Unpublished dissertation followed by the name of the university or
college, followed by a period. Ex. Unpublished dissertation, Michigan State University.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
| MLA Style* |
Jenkins, Timothy S. Identification
and Classification of the Reasons Given by College Students for Why Plagiarism
is Wrong and a Description of How College Students Respond to Explanations
and Statements about Plagiarism. Diss. Michigan State U., 1992. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then first name spelled out.
- Put the dissertation title in quotes. Put the period inside the close quotes. Ex.
Identification and Classification of the Reasons Given by College Students for Why
Plagiarism is Wrong and a Description of How College Students Respond to Explanations and
Statements about Plagiarism.
- Capitalize the main words in the article title and subtitle except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Use the abbreviation Diss. followed by the name of the university or college, followed
by a comma and the year of publication. Ex. Diss. Michigan State U., 1992.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
O'Hearn, T. K. (1995). What we talk about when we
teach research: Plagiarism and fraud across the curriculum. Unpublished dissertation,
Ball State University. Retrieved July 1, 2002, from Digital Dissertations database. |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then initial(s), of the author(s).
- Give the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a period.
- Capitalize the first word in the title and subtitles; the rest should be in lower case
except for proper nouns.
- Put the title of the dissertation or thesis in italics, followed by a period. Ex. What
we talk about when we teach research: Plagiarism and fraud across the curriculum.
- Use the phrase "Unpublished dissertation" followed by the name of the
university or college, followed by a period. Ex. Unpublished dissertation, Ball State
University.
- Give the date you retrieved the dissertation.. Ex. July 1, 2002
- Give the name of the database you retrieved it from. Ex. Retrieved July 1, 2002 from
Digital Dissertations database.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
| MLA Style* |
OHearn, Tamara K. What We Talk
About When We Teach Research: Plagiarism and Fraud Across the Curriculum.
Diss. Ball State U., 1995: Digital Dissertations. Proquest. UMUC
Information and Library Services, Adelphi, MD. 1 Jul. 2002 <http://www.lib.umi.com/dissertations/gateway>.
|
Tips:
- Give the authors last name first, then first name spelled out.
- Put the dissertation title in quotes. Put the period inside the close quotes. Ex.
What We Talk About When We Teach Research: Plagiarism and Fraud Across the
Curriculum.
- Capitalize the main words in the article title and subtitle except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Use the abbreviation Diss. followed by the name of the university or college, followed
by a comma and the year of publication, then a colon. Ex. Diss. Ball State U., 1995:
- Give the name of the database it was retrieved from, underlined, followed by a period.
Ex. Digital Dissertations. Do not add the word database as you did with
APA.
- Add the name of the database vendor or supplier, followed by a period. If the name of
the database vendor or supplier is not apparent to you, contact your librarian for
assistance. Ex. Digital Dissertations. Proquest. UMUC Information and Library
Services, Adelphi, MD.
- Give the date you retrieved the dissertation in this format: the date, the month
abbreviated, then the year, no period or comma. Ex. 1 Jul. 2002
- Give the URL for entering the database. Ex. <http://www.lib.umi.com>. Begin and
end with brackets < and >.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
American Association of Law Libraries (Producer).
(2000). UCITA: A guide to understanding and action [Videorecording]. (Available
from American Association of Law Libraries, 53 W. Jackson, Suite 940, Chicago, IL 60604) |
Tips:
- Give the name of the author/originator and put the function in parentheses, followed by
a period. Ex. American Association of Law Libraries (Producer).
- Give the year of publication in parentheses, followed by a period. Ex. (2000).
- Capitalize the first word in the title and subtitles; the rest should be in lower case
except for proper nouns.
- Put the title of the audiovisual material or in italics, followed by a period. Ex. What
we talk about when we teach research: Plagiarism and fraud across the curriculum.
- Give the type of media, in brackets, followed by a period. Ex. [Videorecording].
- Give availability information, including street address if possible, in parentheses, no
period. Ex. (Available from American Association of Law Libraries, 53 W. Jackson, Suite
940, Chicago, IL 60604)
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- Do not end citation with a period in this instance.
|
| MLA Style* |
UCITA: A Guide to Understanding and Action.
Videorecording. Prod. American Association of Law Libraries, 2000. |
Tips:
- Give the title of the work, underlined, followed by a period.
- Capitalize the main words in the article title and subtitle except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Give the function of the author/originator, abbreviated. Ex. Prod.
- Give the name of the author/originator, followed by a comma. Ex. American Association of
Law Libraries.
- Give the year of publication, followed by a period.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
| Stand-alone
Web document, no author named |
menu
|
|
| APA Style |
Plagiarism: What it is and and how to
recognize and avoid it. (n.d.). Retrieved August 13, 2002, from http://www.indiana.edu/~wts/wts/plagiarism.html
|
Tips:
- Italicize the title. Capitalize the first word in the title and subtitle
of the Web page; the rest should be in lower case except for proper
nouns. End title with a period. Ex. Plagiarism: What it is and how
to recognize and avoid it.
- Specify no publication date given by (n.d.).
|
| MLA Style* |
"Plagiarism: What It is and How to
Avoid It." Writing Tutorial Services, Indiana University, Bloomington
IN. 13 August 2002 <http://www.indiana.edu/~wts/wts/plagiarism.html>.
|
Tips:
- Give the title of the article or page in quotes followed by a period.
Ex. Plagiarism: What It is and How to Avoid It."
- Give the title of the project or sponsor and their location followed
by a period. Ex. Writing Tutorial Services, Indiana University, Bloomington
IN.
- Give the date you retrieved the article or page in this format: the
date, the month abbreviated, then the year, no period or comma. Ex.
13 Aug. 2002
- Give the URL where you retrieved the article or page. Ex. <http://www.indiana.edu/~wts/wts/plagiarism.html>.
Begin and end with brackets < and >
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
Indiana University Writing Tutorial Services (n.d.). Plagiarism:
What it is and how to recognize and avoid it. Retrieved July 1, 2002
from http://www.indiana.edu/~wts/wts/plagiarism.html |
Tips:
- Give the name of the organization as the author.
- Specify no date, abbreviated, in parentheses, followed by a period. Ex.
Indiana University Writing Tutorial Services (n.d.).
- Capitalize the first word in the title and subtitle of the Web page; the rest should be
in lower case except for proper nouns. End title with a period. Ex. Plagiarism: What it is
and how to recognize and avoid it.
- Italicize the title.
- Give the date you retrieved the Web page. Ex. Retrieved November 8, 2001 from
- Give the URL where you retrieved the Web page. Ex. http://www.lib.umi.com
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- Do not end citation with a period in this instance.
|
| MLA Style* |
Indiana University Writing Tutorial Services.
Plagiarism: What It Is and How to Recognize It and Avoid It.
1 Jul. 2002, <http://www.indiana.edu/~wts/wts/plagiarism.html>. |
Tips:
- Give the name of the organization as the author, followed by a period.
- Put the Web page title in quotes. Put the period inside the close quotes. Ex.
Plagiarism: What It Is and How to Recognize It and Avoid It.
- Capitalize the main words in the Web page title and subtitle except stop words like
and, the, a, of, etc.
- Give the date you retrieved the Web page in this format: the date, the month
abbreviated, then the year, no period or comma. Ex. 1 Jul. 2002
- Give the URL where you retrieved the Web page. Ex. <http://www.lib.umi.com>. Begin
and end with brackets < and >.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
|
|
| APA Style |
Francois, O. (2002, June 12). Will proceedings be
available for the ALA conference? Message posted to Digital-Copyright electronic mailing list, archived at http://lists.umuc.edu/digital-copyright/archives/ |
Tips:
- Give last name first, then initial(s), of the author(s).
- Give the year of the posting, followed by a comma, then the date in parentheses,
followed by a period. Ex. (2002, June 12).
- Capitalize the first word in the title and subtitles; the rest should be in lower case
except for proper nouns
- Give the name of the electronic mailing list where you found the posting, and the
location (url) of the lists archive. Ex. Message posted to Digital-Copyright
electronic mailing list, archived at http://lists.umuc.edu/digital-copyright/archives/
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- Do not end citation with a period in this instance.
|
| MLA Style* |
Francois, Olga. Will Proceedings be Available for
the ALA Conference? Online posting. 12 Jun. 2002. Digital-Copyright. 15 Jul.
2002 <http://lists.umuc.edu/digital-copyright/archives/>. |
Tips:
- Give the authors last name first, then first name spelled out.
- Put the title of the posting in quotes. Put the end punctuation (period or question
mark) inside the close quotes. Ex. Will Proceedings be Available for the ALA
Conference?
- Capitalize the main words in the title and subtitle of the posting, except stop words
like and, the, a, of, etc.
- Give the date of the posting in this format: the date, no comma, the month abbreviated,
no comma, then the year, followed by a period.. Ex. Online posting. 12 Jun. 2002.
- Give the name of the electronic mailing list where you found the posting, followed by a
period. Ex. Digital-Copyright.
- Give the date when you found the posting in this format: the date, no comma, the month
abbreviated, no comma, then the year, with no period following. Ex. Online posting. 15
Jul. 2002
- Give the URL for the electronic mailing lists Internet site, followed by a period.
Ex. <http://lists.umuc.edu/digital-copyright/ archives/>. Begin and end the URL with
brackets < and >.
- Indent second and subsequent lines 5 spaces.
- End citation with a period.
|
*Based on MLA, from Bolner, Myrtle S. and Gayle R. Poirier, eds. The Research
Process: Books and Beyond. 2nd ed. Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt, 2001.
Maintained by UMUC Library.
© 1996-2012
University of Maryland University College
3501 University Blvd. East
Adelphi, Maryland 20783 USA
Contact
Us |
|