Difference between revisions of "Citations"
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− | == | + | {|class="wikitable" style="text-align: center; width: 100%" |
− | + | ! colspan = "4" | Type !! colspan = "4" | Team Size | |
+ | |- | ||
+ | | [[:Category:Collaborative Tools|Collaborative Tools]] || [[:Category:Software|Software]] || '''[[:Category:Personal Skills|Personal Skills]]''' || [[:Category:Productivity Tools|Productivity Tools]] || '''[[:Category:Team Size 1|1]]''' || '''[[:Category:Team Size 2-10|2-10]]''' || [[:Category:Team Size 11-30|11-30]] || [[:Category:Team Size 30+|30+]] | ||
+ | |} | ||
− | <big>'''When'''</big>: Citations and references need to be used | + | == What, Why & When == |
+ | <big>'''Why'''</big>: Using correct citation is crucial for academic writing and the basis of all scholarly work. Therefore it is most important that you understand and apply the following rules. Whenever you research a topic, you will read other people’s books and articles and use the information found there for your own interpretation of the subject. Therefore you need to make sure to respect other’s intellectual property and do not violate '''copyright''' laws. Moreover, your statements become more credible if you can show that someone else has had similar results. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <big>'''When'''</big>: Citations and references need to be used in all your academic works, whether these are essays, term papers, presentations, or your final thesis. Whenever you quote or paraphrase from another person’s text, speech or medium, you want to hint at a certain publication or passage, or when you have taken information from another text you must credit your source. | ||
== Goal(s) == | == Goal(s) == | ||
− | * | + | * Make the sources we used for our own work visible and trackable, and our statements verifiable. |
− | * | + | * Give credit to the original author or creator of a text. |
+ | |||
+ | == Getting Started == | ||
+ | One of the difficulties of correct citation is that there are innumerable ways of doing it. Nearly every academic discipline and country has their own preference. The most important aspect here is that you '''stay consistent''' and do not mix several methods within one text (you can always ask your lecturers for their preferred style).<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | There are two prominent ways of referencing you can use within your text: | ||
+ | ====In-Text-Citation==== | ||
+ | This first method has gained more popularity in the last years, especially in international contexts, but also in Germany. By using this method the reader can keep his attention on the main text without having to skip to the bottom of the page for references. Here, a short reference in brackets is placed at the end of the respective sentence or paragraph, usually in front of any punctuation marks. | ||
+ | *(Surname Year, Page) → (Copeland 1997, p. 132) | ||
+ | *(Surname Title, Page) → (Copeland Money, p. 132) | ||
− | == | + | ====Footnotes==== |
+ | Using footnotes for any references is especially common in the traditional humanities. They are numbered and placed at the bottom of the page which is useful if you want to keep your text neat and easy to read. Creating a footnote is quite easy, most writing programmes do it for you. | ||
+ | *<sup>1</sup>Copeland 1997, p. 132. | ||
+ | *<sup>2</sup>Miller 2003, p. 45. | ||
+ | → Make sure to end every footnote with a full stop! | ||
+ | ===Bibliography=== | ||
+ | At the end of your paper you need to compile all of your cited sources in a bibliography. This list should be ordered alphabetically using the authors’ surnames. Here you give the full bibliographic information of your source containing at least author, title, year and place of publication. | ||
+ | In the bibliography we differentiate between monographies, journal articles, articles within anthologies, websites etc. Each of these categories has to be referenced differently. You can find detailed instructions in the sources listed below, but here are some examples:<br> | ||
− | + | '''MLA Style'''<br> | |
+ | Essay in a collection: | ||
+ | *Last Name, First Name. "Title." Title of collection, editor(s), publisher, year, page(s)<br> | ||
+ | *Copeland, Edward. “Money.” The Cambridge Companion to Jane Austen, edited by Copeland and Juliet McMaster, Cambridge UP, 1997, pp. 131-48. | ||
+ | '''APA Style'''<br> | ||
+ | Monography: | ||
+ | *Last Name, Initials. (year). Title: Subtitle. Publisher. | ||
+ | *Sapolsky, R. M. (2017). Behave: The biology of humans at our best and worst. Penguin Books. | ||
+ | '''Chicago Style'''<br> | ||
+ | Website: | ||
+ | *Author Last Name, First Name. “Page Title.” Website Name. Month Day, Year. URL. | ||
+ | *Scribbr. “Chicago Style Citation.” Accessed June 16, 2020. https://www.scribbr.com/category/chicago-style/. | ||
+ | ===Reference Managers=== | ||
+ | Software like Citavi, Mendeley, EndNote or Zotero can help you manage your references and create a bibliography for you. If you write term papers, theses or even journal articles, such [[Reference Manager: Zotero|reference managers]] are a necessity. You need to invest a little bit of time to set them up and get used to the work flow, but after that they will really save you a lot of time. | ||
+ | == Links & Further reading == | ||
+ | * MLA Style (Modern Language Association) - mostly for humanities https://www.mla.org/ | ||
+ | * APA Style (American Psychological Association) - preferred for scientific papers https://apastyle.apa.org/ | ||
+ | * Chicago Style - for social sciences https://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/home.html | ||
---- | ---- | ||
__NOTOC__ | __NOTOC__ | ||
[[Category:Skills_and_Tools]] | [[Category:Skills_and_Tools]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Personal Skills]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Team Size 1]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Team Size 2-10]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | The [[Table_of_Contributors| author]] of this entry is Katharina Kirn. |
Revision as of 13:59, 6 October 2023
Type | Team Size | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Collaborative Tools | Software | Personal Skills | Productivity Tools | 1 | 2-10 | 11-30 | 30+ |
What, Why & When
Why: Using correct citation is crucial for academic writing and the basis of all scholarly work. Therefore it is most important that you understand and apply the following rules. Whenever you research a topic, you will read other people’s books and articles and use the information found there for your own interpretation of the subject. Therefore you need to make sure to respect other’s intellectual property and do not violate copyright laws. Moreover, your statements become more credible if you can show that someone else has had similar results.
When: Citations and references need to be used in all your academic works, whether these are essays, term papers, presentations, or your final thesis. Whenever you quote or paraphrase from another person’s text, speech or medium, you want to hint at a certain publication or passage, or when you have taken information from another text you must credit your source.
Goal(s)
- Make the sources we used for our own work visible and trackable, and our statements verifiable.
- Give credit to the original author or creator of a text.
Getting Started
One of the difficulties of correct citation is that there are innumerable ways of doing it. Nearly every academic discipline and country has their own preference. The most important aspect here is that you stay consistent and do not mix several methods within one text (you can always ask your lecturers for their preferred style).
There are two prominent ways of referencing you can use within your text:
In-Text-Citation
This first method has gained more popularity in the last years, especially in international contexts, but also in Germany. By using this method the reader can keep his attention on the main text without having to skip to the bottom of the page for references. Here, a short reference in brackets is placed at the end of the respective sentence or paragraph, usually in front of any punctuation marks.
- (Surname Year, Page) → (Copeland 1997, p. 132)
- (Surname Title, Page) → (Copeland Money, p. 132)
Footnotes
Using footnotes for any references is especially common in the traditional humanities. They are numbered and placed at the bottom of the page which is useful if you want to keep your text neat and easy to read. Creating a footnote is quite easy, most writing programmes do it for you.
- 1Copeland 1997, p. 132.
- 2Miller 2003, p. 45.
→ Make sure to end every footnote with a full stop!
Bibliography
At the end of your paper you need to compile all of your cited sources in a bibliography. This list should be ordered alphabetically using the authors’ surnames. Here you give the full bibliographic information of your source containing at least author, title, year and place of publication.
In the bibliography we differentiate between monographies, journal articles, articles within anthologies, websites etc. Each of these categories has to be referenced differently. You can find detailed instructions in the sources listed below, but here are some examples:
MLA Style
Essay in a collection:
- Last Name, First Name. "Title." Title of collection, editor(s), publisher, year, page(s)
- Copeland, Edward. “Money.” The Cambridge Companion to Jane Austen, edited by Copeland and Juliet McMaster, Cambridge UP, 1997, pp. 131-48.
APA Style
Monography:
- Last Name, Initials. (year). Title: Subtitle. Publisher.
- Sapolsky, R. M. (2017). Behave: The biology of humans at our best and worst. Penguin Books.
Chicago Style
Website:
- Author Last Name, First Name. “Page Title.” Website Name. Month Day, Year. URL.
- Scribbr. “Chicago Style Citation.” Accessed June 16, 2020. https://www.scribbr.com/category/chicago-style/.
Reference Managers
Software like Citavi, Mendeley, EndNote or Zotero can help you manage your references and create a bibliography for you. If you write term papers, theses or even journal articles, such reference managers are a necessity. You need to invest a little bit of time to set them up and get used to the work flow, but after that they will really save you a lot of time.
Links & Further reading
- MLA Style (Modern Language Association) - mostly for humanities https://www.mla.org/
- APA Style (American Psychological Association) - preferred for scientific papers https://apastyle.apa.org/
- Chicago Style - for social sciences https://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/home.html
The author of this entry is Katharina Kirn.