cite it right!

31
Cite It Right! Winter 2012

Upload: okanagan-college-library

Post on 25-May-2015

39.568 views

Category:

Education


1 download

DESCRIPTION

Introduction to academic integrity and APA citation style. Prepare by librarians at Okanagan College.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Cite it Right!

Cite It Right!

Winter 2012

Page 2: Cite it Right!

Objectives

• To understand why we cite• To understand how we cite• To understand the basics of APA

Page 3: Cite it Right!

What is APA?

The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association is a style manual that provides guidance and standards in:

• research ethics• the publication process• article format and presentation• AND

Citation

APA = American Psychological Association

Page 4: Cite it Right!

Why do we cite?

“Scholarly communication is the entire set of activities that ensure that research and new knowledge can be made known” (DeFelice, 2009).

Page 5: Cite it Right!

AcademicLibraryPublisher

Editor

Peer Reviewers

CreationManuscript & IP

DisseminationPublication (Registration and Certification)

Reformulation

Page 6: Cite it Right!

Why do we cite?

• Citations demonstrate how you developed your argument and ideas from the ideas of others

• Citations give credit where credit is due• Citations give the reader of your work a path

to the sources you used, so they can investigate those sources if interested

(Mohanty et al., 2009)

Page 7: Cite it Right!

Why do we cite?

• If you don’t acknowledge other people’s work, words or ideas you commit plagiarism

“Penalties for plagiarism serve both to educate students about standards of scholarship and to deter deception and poor scholarly practices. Penalties will reflect the seriousness of the offence; including whether the offence was intentional or unintentional and whether it was a first or a repeat offence” (Okanagan College, 2010, Penalties section, para. 1 ).

Okanagan College Academic Offenses regulations and policies

Page 8: Cite it Right!

What do we cite?

• Direct quotes• Paraphrases• Words or terminology specific to or unique to the author’s research, theories, or ideas• Use of an author's argument or line of thinking• Historical, statistical, or scientific facts• Graphs, drawings, etc.• Articles or studies you refer to in your work

(Mohanty et al., 2009)

Page 9: Cite it Right!

How do we cite?

Refer to APA resources to determine citation style.

Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association6th ed., second printingAvailable at all OC Library campuses; Call no. BF 76.7 .P83 2009

OC Library APA style guide webpage• PDF and HTML versions of most common APA examples•Links to other APA resources

Important: The APA manual is the definitive source of APA citation information. If a resource contradicts the manual – use the manual.

Page 10: Cite it Right!

How do we cite?In text citations: citations given in the body of the article, essay, paper, or assignment.

Example:(Morgan & Hunt, 1994)Morgan and Hunt (1994) noted that….

Reference list citations: “provides the information necessary to identify and retrieve each source” (APA, 2009, p. 180).

Example:

Morgan, R. M., & Hunt, S. D. (1994). The commitment-trust theory of

relationship marketing. Journal of Marketing, 58, 20–38.

Page 11: Cite it Right!

From article by Xie and Peng (2009):

In marketing literature, for example, Morgan and Hunt (1994) regard trust as a prerequisite and a central factor for successful relationship marketing. Trust has been defined both in connotative and evaluative terms, such as “a willingness to rely on an exchange partner in whom one has confidence” (Moorman, Zaltman, & Deshpande, 1992, p. 315).

References

Moorman, C., Zaltman, G., & Deshpande, R. (1992). Relationships between

providers and users of market research: The dynamics of trust within and

between organizations. Journal of Marketing Research, 29, 314–328.

Morgan, R. M., & Hunt, S. D. (1994). The commitment-trust theory of relationship

marketing. Journal of Marketing, 58(3), 20–38.

How do we cite?

Page 12: Cite it Right!

How do we cite?

Building blocks?•Author(s)•Publication date•Title•Publication information• Format-specific details

(i.e. page numbers, doi)

What is it?•Journal article•Book•Report

What format?•Print•Electronic

Page 13: Cite it Right!

How do we cite?

•Authors: “invert all authors’ names; give surnames and initials for up to and including seven authors…” (APA, 2009, p. 184).

•Chapter authors in edited book: invert the chapter authors’ names.

•Publication date: “Give in parentheses the year the work was published” (APA, 2009, p. 185).

•Chapter title: “Capitalize only the first word of the title and of the subtitle…and any proper nouns” (APA, 2009, p. 185).

•Do not invert book editors’ names … the name of the book editor should be preceded by the word In” (APA, 2009, p. 184). Place (Ed.) or (Eds.) following editor(s).

Chapter in an edited book: Some APA rules to note

Page 14: Cite it Right!

How do we cite?

•Book title: “Capitalize only the first word of the title and of the subtitle…and any proper nouns; italicize the title” (APA, 2009, p. 185).

•Publication Information: “Give the location… where the publisher is located as noted on the title page for books…use a colon after the location; finish the element with a period” (APA, 2009, p. 186-187). Using city and province is acceptable.

•Pagination: Include chapter page numbers (beginning and end).

Chapter in an edited book: Some APA rules to note

Page 15: Cite it Right!

How do we cite?Chapter in an edited book: Citation

The small details of life: Twenty diaries by women in Canada, 1830-1996

Bonson, A. (2002). Jessie Nagle and Susan Nagle.

(pp. 119-122). Toronto, ON:

In K. Carter (Ed.),

of Toronto Press.University

Page 16: Cite it Right!

How do we cite?

•In text: “References … are cited in text with an author date citation system” (APA, 2009, p. 174).

•In text, direct quotes: “always provide the author, year, and specific page citation or paragraph number for nonpaginated material” (APA, 2009, p. 170).

(Bonson, 2002)According to Bonson (2002)…“direct quote” (Bonson, 2002, p. 120)

Page 17: Cite it Right!

How do we cite?

Building blocks?•Author(s)•Publication date•Title•Publication information• Format-specific details

(i.e. page numbers, doi)

What is it?•Journal article•Book•Report

What format?•Print•Electronic

Page 18: Cite it Right!

How do we cite?

•Author: “Invert all authors names; give surnames and initials for up to and including 7 authors” (APA, 2009, p. 184).

•Publication date: “Give in parentheses the year the work was published” (APA, 2009, p. 185).

•Article title: “Capitalize only the first word of the title and of the subtitle, if any, and any proper nouns; do not italicize the title or place quotation marks around it” (APA, 2009, p. 185).

Journal article retrieved online: Some APA rules to note

Page 19: Cite it Right!

How do we cite?

•Journal title: “Give the periodical title in full, in uppercase and lowercase letters. Italicize the name of the periodical” (APA, 2009, p. 185).

•Publication Information:

–“Give the volume number after the periodical title; italicize it (APA, 2009, p. 186).

–“Include the journal issue number … along with the volume number if the journal is paginated separately by issue (APA, 2009, p. 186).

–Give inclusive page numbers on the which the cited material appears” (APA, 2009, p. 186).

Journal article retrieved online: Some APA rules to note

Page 20: Cite it Right!

Journal article retrieved online: Some APA rules to note•“Provide the DOI, if one has been assigned to the content” (APA,

2009, p. 191).

•“When a DOI is used, no further retrieval information is needed to identify or locate the content” (APA, 2009, p. 191).

•What’s a DOI?

•“If no DOI has been assigned to the content, provide the home page URL of the journal….If you accessing the article from a private database, you may need to do a quick web search to locate this URL” (APA, 2009, pp. 191-2).

How do we cite?

Page 21: Cite it Right!

Journal article retrieved online: Some APA rules to note•“In general, it is not necessary to include database information” (APA,

2009, p. 192).

•“Do not include retrieval dates unless the source material may change over time” (APA, 2009, p. 192).

How do we cite?

Page 22: Cite it Right!

Retrieved from http://www.aeaweb.org/jep/index.php

Anderson, K., Durbin, E., & Salinger, M.

How do we cite?Journal article retrieved online

(2008). Identity theft. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 22(2), 171-192. doi:10.1257/jep.22.2.171

No doi?

Page 23: Cite it Right!

How do we cite?

In text: “When a work has two authors, cite both names, every time the reference occurs in text. When a work has three, four, or five authors, cite all authors the first time the reference occurs; in subsequent citations, include only the surname of the first author followed by et al. …. and the year if it is the first citation of the reference within a paragraph” (APA, 2009, p. 175).

Journal article retrieved online: Some APA rules to note

Page 24: Cite it Right!

How do we cite?

Journal article retrieved online: Citation

Initial citation:(Anderson, Durbin, & Salinger, 2008)Anderson, Durbin, and Salinger (2008) found that…“direct quote” (Anderson, Durbin, & Salinger, 2008, p. 190)

Subsequent:(Anderson et al., 2008)Anderson et al. (2008) found that…“direct quote” (Anderson et al., 2008, p. 190)

Page 25: Cite it Right!

•Group authors: “occasionally, a work will have as its author an agency, association, or institution” (APA, 2009, p. 183).

•Report titles: “Enclose additional information given on the publication for its identification and retrieval (e.g., edition, report number, volume number) in parentheses immediately after the title)” (APA, 2009, p. 185).

•“When the author is also the publisher use Author to indicate the publisher” (APA, 2009, p. 187).

Statistics Canada. (1992). Ageing and independence (Catalogue No. 89-548-XPE). Ottawa, ON: Author.

•“For reports retrieved online, identify the publisher as part of the retrieval statement unless the publisher as been identified as the author: Retrieved from Agency name website: http://www.xxxxx” (APA, 2009, p. 205).

Report retrieved online: Some APA rules to note

How do we cite?

Page 26: Cite it Right!

•In text: “Many electronic sources do not provide page numbers. If paragraph numbers are visible, use them… Use the abbreviation para.” (APA, 2009, p. 172).

•“If the document includes headings and neither paragraph nor page numbers are visible, cite the heading and the number of the paragraph following it to direct the reader to the location of the quoted material” (APA, 2009, p. 172).

•“In some cases … headings may be too unwieldy to cite in full. Instead, use a short title enclosed in quotation marks for the parenthetical citation” (APA, 2009, p. 172).

Report retrieved online: Some APA rules to note

How do we cite?

Page 27: Cite it Right!

(Catalogue No. 11F0027M, The lifetime income approach

How do we cite?

Online report: Citation

Gu, W., & Wong, A.

(Gu & Wong, 2010)Gu and Wong (2010) state that…..“direct quote” (Gu & Wong, 2010, “Main article, data sources section,” para. 2)

(2010). Estimates of human capital in Canada:

Retrieved from Statistics Canada websiteno. 062). http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/11f0027m/11f0027m2010062-eng.htm

Page 28: Cite it Right!

How do we cite?

Reference list: Some APA rules to note

•“Double-spaced and … entries have a hanging indent” (APA, 2009, p. 180).

•“Alphabetize by author surname” (APA, 2009, p. 181).

•“References with the same authors in the same order are arranged by year of publication, the earliest first”(APA, 2009, p. 182).

Page 29: Cite it Right!

How do we cite?References

Anderson, K., Durbin, E., & Salinger, M. (2008). Identity theft. Journal of Economic Perspectives,

22(2), 171-192. doi:10.1257 /jep.22.2.171

Bonson, A. (2002). Jessie Nagle and Susan Nagle. In K. Carter (Ed.), The small details of life:

Twenty diaries by women in Canada, 1830-1996 (pp. 119-122). Toronto, ON:

University of Toronto Press.

Ethier, C. R., & Simmons, C. A. (2007). Introductory biomechanics: From cells to organisms

[Ebrary version]. Retrieved from http://www.cambridge.org

Gu, W., & Wong, A. (2010). Estimates of human capital in Canada: The lifetime income

approach (Catalogue no. 11F0027M, no. 062). Retrieved from Statistics Canada

website http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub /11f0027m/11f0027m2010062-eng.htm

Langowitz, N. S. (2010). Small business leadership: Does being the founder matter? Journal of

Small Business and Entrepreneurship, 23(1), 53-63. Retrieved from

http://www.jsbe.com

Page 30: Cite it Right!

Remember

• Give credit where credit is due• Consult OC Library APA Citation Style guide• Consult APA Publication Manual• If you are unable to identify a specific

example, use an example that is most like your source

• OC Library Research Writing & Citing guide• Ask!

Page 31: Cite it Right!

ReferencesAmerican Psychological Association. (2009). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association. Washington, DC: Author.

Association of College and Research Libraries. (2009). ACRL scholarly communication 101: Starting with the basics [PowerPoint]. Retrieved from http://www.acrl.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/issues/scholcomm/docs/SC%20101%20Introduction.ppt

Barber, K , (Ed.). (2004a). cite. In The Canadian Oxford dictionary (2nd ed.). Retrieved from http://www.oupcanada.com /reference_trade/dictionaries.html

Barber, K , (Ed.). (2004b). citation. In The Canadian Oxford dictionary (2nd ed.). Retrieved from http://www.oupcanada.com /reference_trade/dictionaries.html

Barber, K , (Ed.). (2004c). plagiarize. In The Canadian Oxford dictionary (2nd ed.). Retrieved from http://www.oupcanada.com /reference_trade/dictionaries.html

Defelice, B. (2009). New models of scholarship & publishing. Retrieved from http://www.acrl.ala.org/scholcomm/node/7

Mohanty , S., Orphanides, A., Rumble, J., Roberts, D., Norberg, L., Vassiliadis, K. (2009). University libraries' citing information tutorial. Retrieved from http://www.lib.unc.edu /instruct/citations/introduction/

Okanagan College. (2010). Academic offenses. Retrieved from http://webapps1.okanagan.bc.ca/ok/calendar /Calendar.aspx?page=AcademicOffenses

Xie, Y., & Peng, S. (2009). How to repair customer trust after negative publicity: The roles of competence, integrity, benevolence, and forgiveness. Psychology & Marketing, 26(7), 572-589. Retrieved from http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-MAR.html

LJ&RJ | 10/03/2011