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When to Cite Sources


When to Cite Sources

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When to Cite Sources


Remember that citing your sources gives credit to the ideas of others and adds veracity (truth) to your research and readings.

When to cite

  • If you quote an author, even if you are only borrowing a single key word, you need to tell your reader the origin of the quotation
  • You also need to cite a source:
    • if you restate an idea, thesis, or opinion stated by an author
    • if you restate an expert's theory or opinion
    • if you use facts that are not common knowledge
    • if you need to provide an informational or explanatory note

 

When do you NOT have to cite a reference?

  • If the information is well and widely known and indisputable, including mathematical and scientific facts:

The Republicans succeeded in winning the majority in both the House and Senate in the November elections. AIDS is a disease that is managed but not cured.

  • Statistics and information that can easily be found in several sources and are not likely to vary from source to source:

The population of the United States is 281 million.

 

Three types of citations


Parenthetical (in text)

  • Documentation within the report itself:

(Jones 5)

  • The most commonly used format for student research papers


Endnotes

  • explanatory or informational notes placed at the end of the paper:

5. Jones, M. Death Penalty and Teenagers. 23


Footnotes

  • Citations placed at the bottom of a specific page in a paper
  • Rarely used today in style manuals designed for students in schools and colleges


MLA Style

Plagiarism


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