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MLA Style. Modern Language Association most commonly used within the liberal arts and humanities. Specifications for essays and reports Layout of paper Citing of resources (embedded and Citation List). What is MLA Style. Why Cite. Academic honesty Give credit to those who earned it
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MLA Style Modern Language Association most commonly used within the liberal arts and humanities
Specifications for essays and reports Layout of paper Citing of resources (embedded and Citation List) What is MLA Style
Why Cite • Academic honesty • Give credit to those who earned it • Give credibility to your paper • If you don’t cite, you are plagiarising • Plagiarising is cheating
Plagiarism is: • Copying all or part of another person's work • Paying another person to write your essay or report • Having another person write your essay or report • Failing to cite another person's ideas • Rewording, summarizing or paraphrasing another's ideas without giving credit • Stealing another person's essay or report • Copying all or part of another source, such as information found in a website, without citing the source
Glenforest's Plagiarism Policy • Zero for the paper • Plagiarism Workshop completion • Parents are informed • Note put in student record • Repeated offenses: • Meeting with Principal • Suspension • Loss of Credit
You don’t need to cite… • Your own ideas or analysis • Primary research (e.g. surveys you conducted) • Commonly known information (i.e.: the earth is round, we breathe oxygen, Canada has 10 provinces, the prime minister of Canada)
You DO need to cite… • Quotations • Images, art, maps, photographs, charts • Paraphrased information (Note: changing one or two words is NOT paraphrasing!) • Summarized information • Cartoons • Advertisements • Audio Visual Materials (music, radio, DVD, MP3 files, broadcast etc.) • Statistics
A Typical Paper • No title page • Header on all pages • 1"/2.5cm margins • double spaced • 12 point font • Times New Roman • every paragraph is indented 1”/2.5 cm
1st Step for Citing • New page • Title is "Works Cited" • Entry for every resource cited in the paper • Double spaced • Hanging indent • Very specific rules for each resource (check Source It!) • Alphabetical order by first item in the list
2nd Step for Citing • Place embedded citations throughout your essay wherever you use someone else's work (direct quote or paraphrasing) • refers to an item listed in your Works Cited page • For a quotation of five lines or more, introduce the passage in your own words, then indent the block of quoted text one inch from the left margin.
Embedded Citations • place citation in brackets, at the end of the quote or piece of information being cited • provide the first piece of info from the Works Cited page (For long titles, the first 2 or 3 words is fine.) • provide the page number, if available Sample essay (Bliss 12) (14) When author is mentioned in the lead-up, or subsequent citations for author already cited (“Biography for…")
The Tricky Part: formatting the citations • Citations are different for every type of resource • Follow the formats and examples for the types of materials you are using • Use Source It online to find out the formatting (found under the Library tab, clikc on Bibliographies and Plagiarism page, scroll down to MLA) • Use the citation tools within the databases • Use http://www.bibme.org, www.citationmachine.net or www.easybib.com or other citation tools on the web to help you
Works Cited: Guiding Principles • Give as much information as possible • Make sure your teacher can acquire the resource • If something is missing, leave it out • Cite every resource you use • DO NOT cite wikis or search engines (e.g. Google, Wikipedia, Yahoo) • Use reliable sources only
For your convenience, this PowerPoint and a video on “How to set up your MLA paper”, have been posted on the Bibliographies and Plagiarism page on the website under Library.
With thanks to…. • The library staff at Glenforest S. S. • Your teacher for caring enough to bring you here • Source It!