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Citing Sources in the Text
Use a combination of signal phrases and parenthetical references to differentiate your source material from your own ideas and position.
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Sources for material in this presentation: Ackley, Katherine Anne. Ed
Sources for material in this presentation: Ackley, Katherine Anne. Ed. Perspectives on Contemporary Issues: Readings Across the Disciplines. 5th ed. Boston: Wadsworth Cengage Print. Hacker, Diana, and Nancy Sommers. A Pocket Style Manual. 6th ed. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s Print.
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Use the author’s full name and the article name in the first mention if you are using an important source. Use page numbers for print sources. First mention: According to Jessica Reaves in “What the Rest of Africa Could Learn about AIDS,” “The Senegalese government has taken a remarkably active role in the sex education of its citizens” (454). Second mention: Reaves maintains that “comprehensive sex education—including information about condoms and how to use them—is one of the most important weapons in the fight against AIDS” (455).
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Online or electronic sources sometimes have unclear authorship and lack page numbers.
Paraphrase: A 2005 study by the American Management Association and ePolicy Institute found that seventy-six percent of companies monitor employees’ use of the web, and the number of companies that block their access to certain web sites has increased twenty-seven percent since 2001. Quote: According to the American Management Association, “Technology makes it possible for employers to gather enormous amounts of data about employees.”
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Electronic Works Cited Entry --article from a website w/ an organization as an author
American Management Association and ePolicy Institute. “2005 Electronic Monitoring and Surveillance Survey.” American Management Association. Amer. Management Assn., 2005. Web. 15. Feb
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Citing Government Documents
In the text: Online monitoring by the United States Department of the Interior over a one-week period found that employees’ use of “sexually explicit and gambling websites accounted for over 24 hours of Internet use” (3). In the Works Cited: United States. Dept. of the Interior. Office of Inspector General. “Excessive Indulgences: Personal Use of the Internet at the Department of the Interior.” Office of Inspector General. Dept. of the Interior, Sept Web. 20 May 2010.
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Article from an online journal
In the text: Chris Gonsalves reports in “Wasting Away on the Web,” that “more than fifty percent of the employees in the office who are online are not focused solely on work-related projects, but are also sending personal , shopping or using Facebook or other social media sites.” In the Works Cited: Gonsalves, Chris. “Wasting Away on the Web.” eWeek.com. Ziff Davis Enterprise Holdings, 8 Aug Web. 16 Feb
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