RHS- Citation Formats - Quick Sheet 2005-2006 |
BOOKS - One or more authors or editors
|
Author Last name, First
name. Title of Book. Place of publication: Publisher,
date of publication.
Author Last name, First
name and Author first name, Last name. Title of Book. Place of publication:
Publisher, date of
publication.
Editor Last name, First
name, ed. Title
of Book. Place of publication: Publisher, date of publication. |
Friel, John C. The
7 Best Things Smart Teens Do.
Deerfield Beach, FL: Health Communications, 2000.
Passman, Donald S.
and Randy Glass. All You Need to Know About the Music Business. NY: Simon and Schuster, 2002.
Guinn, John, ed.
The St. James Opera Encyclopedia.
Mt. Kisco, NY: 1996.
BOOKS - No author
| Title
of Book. Place
of publication: Publisher, date of publication. |
American environmentalism.
San Diego, CA: Greenhaven Press, 2002.
BOOKS
- Part of a book (such as an essay, poem, article or story from a collection
(anthology).
| Author of selection
Last name, First name. "Title of Selection." Title of Anthology. Editor of anthology. Place of publication: Publisher, date of
publicaton. Page(s). |
Lippman, Matthew. "Hallelujah
Terrible." The Best American Poetry 1997. Ed. James Tate. NY:
Scribner,
1997. 132.
BOOKS - ENCYCLOPEDIA article
| Author last name,
first. "Title of article." Encyclopedia. Year ed. |
Brown, Norman. " India." Encyclopedia Americana. 2002 ed.
- If there is no author, use "title
of article" as the first piece of information.
- Encyclopedia articles are signed by a contributing
author whose name may appear at the end of an article.
BOOKS - Multivolume work
Include
the number of the volume you are using between the title and the publication
information.
Johannsen, Robert.
"Abraham Lincoln." The American Presidents. Vol. 2.
Danbury, CT: Grolier, 1989.
MAGAZINES
& NEWSPAPERS (periodicals)
Author
Last name, First name. "Title of Article." Name of Magazine day
month year: page(s).
Stone,
Steve and Jenifer Lin. "Spamming the World." Newsweek
19 August 2002: 42-44. (weekly)
Lemley,
Brad. "The Next Ice Age." Discover. September 2002: 34 - 40.
(monthly)
"Nuclear Safety Flaws
are Found." New York Times
11
August 1999
: A14. (no author)
SCHOLARLY JOURNALS
| Author(s). "Title
of Article." Name of Journal. Vol.issue (Year) : pages. |
Applebee,
Arthur. "Engaging Students in the Disciplines of English." English
Journal. 91.6 (2002) : 23-29.
VIDEO PRODUCTIONS
Secrets
of the Titanic. Videocassette. National Geographic, 1986.
PERSONAL INTERVIEWS
(Interview by writer of research paper)
Suozzi, Tom. Personal interview. 15 2002
ELECTRONIC RESOURCES - INTERNET
Web Sites
Formats differ for e-mail; web pages; on-line books, subscription services,
images, sounds, etc. Follow the links to home pages to locate information. The format below is for web pages from Internet web sites. Provide as much information as possible to identify the source. Web pages often do not provide all of the necessary information, so if items are missing they cannot be included. The entry should consist of the following items
in this order, as available:
- Author or editor. [last name, first name].
- "Title of page or document." [exact page you are using in quotation marks].
- Title of the site or homepage [underlined - site name where page came from].
- Date posted (or last update). [format is - day Monty year].
- Sponsoring organization. [government agency, university, business, organization].
- Date accessed. [format is - day Month year[
- Electronic address <URL>.
Author(s). "Name of Page." Title of Site or Homepage. Date of Posting/Revision. Name of institution/organization affiliated with the site. Date of Access <URL>
|
Johnson, Steven. "The Bill of Rights." Thomas Legislative Information on the Internet. October 1999. Library Of Congress. 12 January 2004 http://memory.loc.gov/const/bor.html>.
| Parenthetical Documentation - Citing References in Your Text |
When someone else's thoughts or words are used as a direct quote, paraphased, or discussed in your writing you MUST document the source. Unless stating one's own personal opinions, drawing conclusions, or writing creative material, ALL facts, background data and ideas come from some place else, and they must be acknowledged. This may be done in the following manner.
1. The author’s name may be a part of the sentence, with a page number in parenthesis, as follows:
Benton states “an alternative strategy is the use of groups that are trained to use their members as resources” (14). (refers to page 14 – punctuation for sentence is after the reference)
2. The author’s name is not part of your sentence, but you wish to cite a given source in support of a point you are making or provide information, as follows:
Cooperative groups are an essential part of the education of students in the classroom, and a major component of educational practice. (Benton 25). (Refers to author and page, notice punctuation). |