A citation...
- describes a book, journal article, website, or other item;
- enables the reader to retrieve the item you refer to,
- includes the author, title, source (publisher and place of publication or URL), and date,
- follows the desired style of the assignment, publication, or other venue for the project.
Why do we cite?
- Helps us keep track of our own ideas: Citing as you go creates a good trail for your research.
- Helps us give credit to the originator of an idea, thus preventing plagiarism.
- Helps us celebrate the original work of the originator of an idea, lifting up their work and ideas and making them more visible. The author(s) did a lot of work to create their book, journal article, or other item, and citing them not only gives them credit, but also kudos.
- Helps us connect others' ideas to one another.
How do we cite?
- In-text citations and footnotes: Quickly give credit and reference to others' words and ideas inside our writing.
- Bibliography/Reference list: List of our citations at the end of a paper, presentation, or other project. Helps readers find the full information for the sources we referenced when creating our own work.
- Annotated bibliography: Helps readers -- or ourselves -- know/remember what an article was about, and why it was good to use in our project, by providing a brief description of each work being cited, summarizing and/or assessing the source.
Failing to cite a source correctly is plagiarism. Plagiarism is an academic offense and could get you in serious trouble! But don't panic: as long as you follow the citation guidelines, you will be fine. And remember: when in doubt, cite. It is always better to include a citation that you don't need than to forget a citation that you do need.
Check out our Citing Sources Guide if you need more help!