Citation is not just a boring exercise required by your professors. It is a crucial part of the research process for four reasons:
Citation is how you show your work. This is how you let your readers know you have done the necessary research to write with authority about your topic.
Citation is how you invite others to follow. Readers should be able to use your citations to do their own research, allowing them to add, complicate, agree, or disagree.
Citation is how you give credit. Your ideas are built on the work and ideas of others. Part of being an honest, ethical researcher is acknowledging what you owe to others in specific and visible ways. Citation is the most powerful way to do that.
Citation is a celebratory act. It provides space to honor particularly innovative or interesting work by demonstrating your engagement with it in your own writing.
MLA and APA Citation Help
If citing has you confused, take a look at these guides for citing resources in your research paper.
The library's guide on MLA Style provides examples of in-text and Works Cited citations for a variety of resources according to the 8th edition of the MLA Handbook.
Online version of the 17th edition provides footnote, bibliography, and embedded citation examples as well as advice for citing new and emerging media.
Concise Guide to APA Style
by
American Psychological Association Staff (Contribution by)
ISBN: 9781433832734
Publication Date: 2019-12-01
Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association
by
American Psychological Association
Call Number: BF76.7 .P83 2020 (Reference or Reserve)
Publication Date: 2019-10-01
You can find copies of the APA Publication Manual in the library stacks or ask for the copies on Reserve from the Circulation desk..