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This is the basic formula for a book:
Last name, first initial. (year of publication). Title. City of publication: publisher.
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This is the basic formula for an article retrieved from a database or web site:
Author, last name, first initial. (Year). Article title. pages. Retrieved [month day, year] from [database name] or URL.
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This is the basic formula for an article retrieved from a newspaper database:
Author’s last name, first initial. (Year, month, day). Article title. Newspaper Title, pages. Retrieved [month day, year] from [database name].
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This is the basic formula for a journal article retrieved from a database:
Author’s last name, first initial. (Year). Article title. Journal Title, volume(issue), pages. Retrieved [month day, year] from [database name].
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Document title or name of Web page. (n.d.) Retrieved [date] from [URL]
This is the basic formula for citing a stand-alone Internet document (no author/date): Document title or name of Web page. (n.d.) Retrieved [date] from [URL]
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Cases should be cited in this manner:
First party v. second party, reporter volume no. U.S. first page of case, specific page referred to, and the date of the decision in parentheses.
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This is how you would cite an e-book.
Wharton, E. (2006). The Age of Innocence. Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia Library. Retrieved March 6, 2009, from netLibrary database.
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This is how you would cite a journal article from the Kaplan library.
Shaw, G., & Graham, T. (2007). Helping gifted students develop metacognitive awareness. Reading Review, 20, 4-8. Retrieved November 4, 2008, from MasterFile Premier database.
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