Bibliography -
Transcription
Bibliography -
Bibliography Chambers Concise Dictionary (2009) Edinburgh: Chambers Harrap Publishers Ltd. Pears, R. Shields, G. (2008) Cite them right. Durham: Pear Tree Books. For further information please see: How to write a bibliography—A Learning Resources Guide Cite them write—Available in the LRC at shelf mark 808.02:PEA And finally, please be aware the College has plagiarism software that is used to detect suspected copied work. F:\GROUPS\LRC\USER EDUCATION\How to cite sources—Summer 2010 How to cite sources - using the Harvard System A LEARNING RESOURCES SERVICE GUIDE F:\GROUPS\LRC\USER EDUCATION\How to cite sources—Summer 2010 First, some definitions - Government Publications - To CITE means formally recognising, within your text, the resources from which you have obtained information. In the body of the essay, you will need to include the Country of publication, the government department and the year of the publication, i.e. The REFERENCE is the detailed description of the item from which you have obtained your information. The BIBLIOGRAPHY is the list of sources you have used. Why do you need cite sources? Whenever you write an essay, assignment or project it is important that any time you use someone else’s ideas, facts or information from a book, article, web page or anywhere else, that you acknowledge that work and provide a reference to any material you have used. It also allows anyone reading your work to check any facts or arguments you have presented. Always make sure that you record references to materials you consult precisely, as you go along, before you return them to the LRC! This will save you a lot of time and stress later when you need to incorporate a reference you have used into your bibliography. F:\GROUPS\LRC\USER EDUCATION\How to cite sources—Summer 2010 Prison numbers increased last year (Great Britain, Ministry of Justice, 2007)… About plagiarism If you copy exactly or quote another person‟s words you must put those words in quotation marks and credit the source of the information i.e. Plagiarism is to “copy (ideas, passages of text, etc.) from someone else‟s work and use as if they were ones own” (Chambers, 2009 p. 929) By not citing an author's work you may be accused of plagiarism, which is serious and may affect the marks you receive. To avoid plagiarism, you must cite your sources whenever you use: another person’s ideas, opinions or theories; any specific facts, statistics, graphs or drawings, pictures including Google images, from books, web pages, magazines or elsewhere. copy exactly or quote a person’s spoken or written word paraphrase another person's written or spoken words by using their ideas but putting them in your own words Whenever you cite a source in the body of your work, DON‟T FORGET TO INCLUDE THE SOURCE IN YOUR BIBLIOGRAPHY, AT THE END OF YOUR ESSAY. F:\GROUPS\LRC\USER EDUCATION\How to cite sources—Summer 2010 You could, however, mention the programme in the following way: A recent television programme explained the concept of learned helplessness. (Child of our Time, 2010) Journals An article was written by Alan Clarke, entitled „Towards an e-inclusive society‟, in Adults Learning, Volume 17, Issue 4, in December 2005 on page 24. This article would be cited in the text of your work as: (Clarke, 2005, p.24) You would reference it in your bibliography in the way you always reference journal articles. For newspapers Cite in the same way as for journals. Electronic sources including the Internet and VLEs In the body of the essay, refer to the author of the article accessed, or if there is no specific author, the name of the website, for example (Adams, 2010) or (TES, 2010) If there is no author, insert the web address instead. It would be referred to in your bibliography in the normal way you reference electronic sources. F:\GROUPS\LRC\USER EDUCATION\How to cite sources—Summer 2010 The bibliography will appear at the end of your work. It is evidence of the books, journal articles and other sources you have used in your research. The first two elements of your reference, i.e. author and date, will usually appear whenever you cite a work in the body of your essay or assignment and are also usually the first two things you list for each source in your bibliography. Thus anyone reading your work can move easily between the text and the bibliography and trace a correct reference. There are a number of systems for citing material you have used in your work but we recommend the Harvard citation system. This system was developed in the USA and is now the most commonly used citation system worldwide. Harvard does not use footnotes in the main text (which makes life easier for you); instead all you need to do is insert the author’s surname, year of publication and page number in round brackets at each point in the text that refers to a particular document. Books If the author’s name occurs naturally in the sentence, just put the year and page number in brackets, i.e. In a popular study Smith (2009, p.23) argues that … Otherwise put both the name, year and page number in brackets at the end of the sentence, i.e. ..the results of a recent study into the effects of smoking on health support this argument. (Smith, 2009, p.23) F:\GROUPS\LRC\USER EDUCATION\How to cite sources—Summer 2010 If the author has published more than one document in the same year that you need to cite, add a, b, c, d etc. after the year, i.e. And in the bibliography you would put Downing-Green, R (2000) … If there are two authors - Smith (2008a, p.28) concludes that…. When two or more authors have the same surname and have published in the same year, initials should identify them in order to avoid confusion, i.e. Smith, J (2008, p.31) discussed the important role care workers can have while Smith, B (2008, p.68) supports this argument by … Give both names when citing in the text, i.e. …Smith and Green (2009, p.21) describe … In the bibliography, list both authors but list the work according to the first author, i.e. Smith, J and Green, B (2008)… Treat corporate authors in the same way, i.e. In a recent survey the Department of Health (2010, p.75) showed that… And in the bibliography you would put: Department of Health, (2010, p.75)… etc. What to do in more complicated cases - If there are three or more authors Abbreviate the list of authors by using just the first author and et al both in the body of your essay and in the bibliography, i.e. …as argued by Smith et al (2008, p13)… And in the bibliography Smith, J et al. (2008)… For e-books - If the author‟s surname is double barrelled with no hyphen - Cite in the same way as for books. Use both parts of the surname in the text and in the bibliography list the work alphabetically according to the last part of the surname. E.g. if the author’s name is J Wynn Smith in the text you would put Audio Visual including Television Programmes, Films, DVDs and Podcasts - … as Wynn Smith (2009, p.2) argues …. And in the bibliography you would put Smith, J Wynn (2009) … If the author‟s surname is hyphenated You treat the surname as one word. i.e. in the text you would put …as Downing-Green (2007, p.13) concludes… F:\GROUPS\LRC\USER EDUCATION\How to cite sources—Summer 2010 Cite in the same way as for books. To mention the programme/film quite naturally in the sentence, you could write any of the following: Child of our Time (2010) explained the concept of learned helplessness. F:\GROUPS\LRC\USER EDUCATION\How to cite sources—Summer 2010