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Learn the basics of creating a bibliography for your research, including the different types of sources and how to properly cite them. This guide provides examples and tips to help you organize and format your bibliography.
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So I have to do a bibliography? What exactly is that? And where do I start?
What is a bibliography? • An organised list of resources • Set out in a strict style – Harvard • Sorted in alphabetical order
Your entries may include… • Book with 1 author • Book with 2 or more authors • Anthology • Monthly or quarterly magazine article • Newspaper article • Film, filmstrip, videotape • Anonymous work or article • TV or radio broadcast
Or these: • Multivolume work • Weekly magazine article • Website • CD Rom or electronic journal • Scholarly journal • Translated article • Government document • interview
When doing research and creating a bibliography the following are really important considerations: • AUTHORITY- Who wrote it? What are their credentials? (i.e. PhD, Professor, unqualified writer) • AUDIENCE - Who are the intended audience – eg. Researchers? Students? Consumers?
More important considerations… • USEFULNESS - How useful is it to your paper? eg. Is it a research article? Is it too scientific for your needs? Is it too general? • CONCLUSIONS - Have the author(s) made any conclusions? What methods were used for evaluation? • LIMITATIONS - Are there any limitations in the work/methods/conclusions?
Your work cited page, or bibliography, should look like this:
The basic entry: A book by a single author • Pattern: • [Author last name] [Author first name initial] [Year], [Title of Work], [Publisher], [Location]. Fukuyama, Francis. Our Post human Future: Consequences of the Biotechnology Revolution. New York: Farrar. • Online Book Example: • Nugent, P, & Vitale, B 2008, 'Chapter 11: Practice Questions with Answers and Rationales', Test Success: Test-Taking Techniques for Beginning Nursing Students (5th Edition) pp. 159-294 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: F.A. Davis Company CINAHL Plus with Full Text, EBSCOhost, viewed 6 December 2010.
But for each source: There is a specific way to cite it ------- and there are examples of each in your diary p107-109
A Book by Two or More Authors: Eggins, Suzanne, and Diane Slade. 1997. Analysing Casual Conversation. London: Cassell. Marquart, James W., Sheldon Ekland Olson, and Jonathan R. Sorensen. 1994. The Rope, the Chair, and the Needle: Capital Punishment in Texas. Austin: U of Texas P.
If there are more than 3 authors, you may name only the first and add et al. (and others) Quirk, Randolph, et al. 1985. A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language. London: Longman.
Journal or Magazine Article • Pattern: • [Author last name], [Author first initial] [Year], ‘[Title of article]’, [Journal Name], [Volume number], [issue number], pp. [page number start]-[end], [URL or Database Name], [EBSCOhost], viewed [day month year]. Example: • Maynard, W 1999 'Thoreau's House at Walden', Art Bulletin, 81, 2, pp. 303, Academic Search Premier, EBSCOhost, viiewed 6 December 2010
Journal or Magazine Article w/No Author • Pattern: • ‘[Title of article]’ [Year], [Journal Name], [Volume number], [issue number], pp. [page number start]-end], [URL or Database Name], [EBSCOhost], viewed [day month year]. • Example: • 'Royal Dogfight' 2004, People, 61, 1, p. 28, Academic Search Premier, EBSCOhost, viewed 6 December 2010.
Online Newspaper Article • Pattern: • [Author last name], [Author first initial] [Year], ‘[Title of article]’ [Newspaper Name], [Day month of publication], [URL or Database Name], [EBSCOhost], viewed [day month year]. • Example: • Lacey, M 2007, 'A Communist He Was, but Today, Che Sells', New York Times, 9 October, Newspaper Source Select, EBSCOhost, viewed 6 December 2010. • Online Newspaper Article w/No Author • Pattern: • ‘[Title of article]’ [Year], [Newspaper Name], [Day month of publication], [URL or Database Name], [EBSCOhost], viewed [day month year]. • Example: • 'Metro Briefing | Connecticut: Hartford: Domestic Violence Proposal', 2005, New York Times, 10 January, Newspaper Source Select, EBSCOhost, viewed 6 December 2010.
Electronic Information: • Follow the recommendations for citing information from books • If there is no author, begin with the title of the document • The title of the site is in italics and follows the title of the article. • Follow with: date of electronic publication, date of print publication, name of sponsoring institution, URL • When the site was accessed (accessed August 5, 2012)
Website example: Pattern: • [Website Page Name] [Year]. [Website Organization], [Website Organization Location], viewed [Date Month Year], <[URL]>. Example: • Tommy Bolin Archives 2010. The Official Tommy Bolin Archives, USA, viewed 9 December 2010, http://www.tbolin.com/index.html.
How to get going… • First, locate and record citations to books, periodicals, and documents that may contain useful information and ideas on your topic. Briefly examine and review the actual items. Then choose those works that provide a variety of perspectives on your topic. • Cite the book, article, or document using the appropriate style.
Where to search… • You have 3 minutes to quickly search for information on the topic • “Gotu Kola improves memory” • After 3 minutes we will discuss what information was found, what sites, what type of article etc.
Finding good sources… • Using Google is not the best way to go about searching for good quality articles by qualified and respected academics. The best sources are hidden in databases so you have to know where to find the databases for your subject. Some freely available database searches are : • Google Scholar and Microsoft’s Academic Search • Subscription databases have a wider selection and often the full text of the source rather than just the citation or abstract.
Boolean Terms The following table illustrates the operation of Boolean terms: If there are nested parentheses, the search engine processes the innermost parenthetical expression first, then the next, and so on until the entire query has been interpreted. For example, ((mouse OR rat) AND trap) OR mousetrap
What to record • For books, record: • The author’s or editor’s name (or names) • The year the book was published • The title of the book • If it is an edition other than the first • The city the book was published in • The name of the publisher
What to record • For journal articles record: • The author’s name or names • The year in which the journal was published • The title of the article • The title of the journal • The page number/s of the article in the journal • As much other information as you can find about the journal, for example the volume and issue numbers
What to record • For electronic resources, try to collect the information on the left if it is available, but also record: • The date you accessed the source • The electronic address or email • The type of electronic resource (email, discussion forum, WWW page, etc) • In addition to these details, when you are taking notes, if you copy direct quotations or if you put the author’s ideas in your own words, write down the page numbers you got the information from.
When to Cite • Quote directly: use another person’s ideas in their words • Paraphrase: present another person’s ideas in your words • Summarise: express another person’s ideas in fewer words • Use ideas, theories, facts, experiments, case studies, from a source • Adopt another person’s research method, survey or experiment design • Use statistics, tables, diagrams etc. — not just words!
How to cite examples • When using quotations in your text observe the following examples: He stated, “The relative importance of the systems may nevertheless remain in approximately the same proportion” (Gardner, 1973, p. 41) Smith (1991) found that “... there is no evidence that chimpanzees can produce a drawing and discern the object represented in it ...” (p. 84)
Citing when there is no author When a source has no author, cite the first two or three words of the title followed by the year. For example: ... in the recent book (Encyclopaedia of psychology, 1991, p. 62)... ... in this article (“Individual differences,” 1993, p. 12) ... Web pages where no author is given: • Alcohol Concern (“Call to stop”, 2007) have proposed various policies to … The key point is that your in-text reference matches the start of the reference in your reference list/bibliography.
Your Mission Today: • Locate 3-5 sources on your topic. Write Harvard Cited style entry for each source. • Look for any biographical info./credentials you can find about the author and note them. • Scan the source and note the content. Look at a few specific passages that catch your eye—summarize them. Do you detect any bias? Is the source written for a particular audience (scholars, professionals in the field, general adult audience, educators, social workers, parents, teenagers, the poor, religious etc…)? • Write your bibliography from your notes.
Login http://www.questiaschool.com/ Facts on File • http://online.infobaselearning.com/Direct.aspx?aid=107722&pid=WE00 • Access Credentials: - In school auto login link One Search, the library catalogue • Search all of State Library's collections plus millions of journal articles and ebooks at the same time. Just enter your words in the search box. • Not all eresources are available in One Search. • http://onesearch.slq.qld.gov.au/
Top Referencing Tips • Your reference should help your reader to recover your source easily. If it cannot be found again, don’t reference it. • Be consistent with layout and punctuation. • Only list references you have read yourself. • Do not list sources that are mentioned in the works you have seen when compiling your reference list. • There will not be guidance for every type or variation of a source. • Use the nearest style you can find to fit the source. • If in doubt, do what your teacher says, not what the library says or what the referencing system says. Only teachers give and take away marks.