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Education: Citation

Education

Citations in Databases

In many databases you will find tools to help you create a citation. When you find an article that you like in Ebsco databases, click the citation tool found on the right to create a citation.

 

This citation option will create a citation in various formats such as APA, MLA, etc.
Copy and paste the citation, but be sure to check for errors.

Additional Links

These are additional sites that you may find helpful in creating citations or writing your paper:

Online Thesaurus, Dictionary, and Translator

Merriam Webster Dictionary

Things to remember...

Things to remember when working on a research paper:

  • Be sure to cite your sources. Using materials without a proper citation is plagiarism.
  • Write concisely, use your words carefully.
  • Do not wait until last minute to do your research, papers will take time.
  • Ask your professor or a librarian for help.
  • The writing center is available on Paris campus for additional assistance. Call 903-782-0314 for hours or go to room AD 125 (administration building) to set up an appointment.

Citation Assistance

Below is a link to Purdue University's Online Writing Center (OWL). that can help with your research citations. 

Citing Government Sources

Citation Style Guides for Government Information

____________
Olson, John.  "Basic U.S. Government Documents."  Government Subject
         Guide, Syracuse Univ.
, 2013.  Web.  17 Oct. 2013.

Checklist for Evaluting Sources

Determine whether the source is relevant.  Will the source help you accomplish your purpose and address your readers' needs, interests, values, and beliefs?

√Determine whether the source provides evidence and uses it appropriately.  Is enough evidence of the right kind offered?  Is evidence used fairly, is it convincing, and is its source provided?

√Learn about the author of the source.  Ask whether the author is knowledgable.  Try to determine the author's affiliation and consider how the author's biases affect the agruments, ideas, and arguments in the source.

√Learn about the publisher of the source.  Try to locate information about the publisher, and reflect on how the publisher's biases affect the information, ideas, and arguments in the source.

√Think about the timeliness of the source and its impact on and relevance to your project.

√Consider the comprehensiveness of the source and its impact on and relevance to your project.

√Consider the genre of the source and its impact on the kind of information included in the source, the manner in which information is used by the author, and the likely audience for which the source was written.

Source:  Palmquist, Mike.  The Bedford Researcher, 3rd ed.  Boston:  Bedford, 2009.  Print.