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MLA Guidelines

MLA Guidelines. Adapted from Bakersfield College Library and Purdue University On-line Writing Lab. What is MLA Citation?. MLA citation refers to the referencing style established by the Modern Language Association for recognizing sources used in a research paper .

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MLA Guidelines

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  1. MLA Guidelines Adapted from Bakersfield College Library and Purdue University On-line Writing Lab

  2. What is MLA Citation? • MLA citation refers to the referencing styleestablished by the ModernLanguageAssociation for recognizingsources used in a researchpaper . • MLA citation style uses a simpletwo-partparenthetical documentation system for citing sources: • Citations in the text of a paper are used to point to • An alphabetical Works cited list that appears at the end of the paper. • Together these references identify and creditthesources used in the paper and allowothersto access and retrieve this material.

  3. When do I document my sources? • When I am using another persons exact words. • When I am presenting (paraphrasing) an original idea that is not my own. • When I am reporting or summarizing facts that are available from only one source.

  4. Why Use MLA Format? • Allows readers to cross-reference your sources easily • Gives you credibility as a writer • Protects you from being accused of plagiarism

  5. MLA Style: Two Parts • In-text citation • Works cited page

  6. When Should You Use In-Text Citations? • When summarizing facts and ideas from a source • Summarizing means to take ideas from a large passage of another source, and condense them in your own words • When paraphrasinga source • Paraphrasing means to use the ideas from another source, but change the phrasing into your own words • When quoting any words that are not your own • Quoting means to repeat another source word for word, using quotation marks

  7. How to Cite IN Your Text • Give only the information needed to identify a source. Usually type the author's last name and a page number. EX: Romantic poetry is characterized by the “spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings” (Wordsworth 263). • Citation should not repeat information in your text. If you include an author's name in a sentence, do not repeat it in the citation. EX: Wordsworth stated that Romantic poetry was marked by a “spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings” (263). REMINDERS: • The citation should be placed before the punctuation mark that concludes the sentence. (see examples above) • Electronic and online sources are cited just like print resources. If an online source lacks numbering, omit numbers from the in-text citation.

  8. More about using in-text citations Sometimesmore information is necessary • When you have morethanoneauthor with the samelastname, use first initial (W. Wordsworth 23) or (D. Wordsworth 224) • When you have morethanonework by the same author, add a key word from the title. (Russo, Bridge 121); (Russo, Empire 556) • Citing indirectsources: When another person is quoted in your source, use qtd. (Johnson qtd. in Boswell 450)

  9. In-Text Citations Continued… • If the source has no known author, use an abbreviated version of the title: Example: Full Title: “California Cigarette Tax Deters Smokers” (“California” 14) • If the source has nopagenumbers, use the author or web site’s creator: Example: Source: Dave Poland’s “Hot Button” web column (Poland)

  10. Guidelines for Long Quotations • For quotes that are longer than 4 lines: • Start the quote on a new line • The quotation must be indented from the left side for the length of the entire quote • No quotation marks • Cite as usual but after punctuationmark.

  11. Works Cited Page Contents • Contains • A listofeverysource that you made reference to in your essay • A list of everysource you usedtoinformyourself about the topic even if you didn’t quote from it in your essay • Provides • the information for a reader tolocate any sources used in your essay.

  12. Works Cited Page Guidelines Most citations should include the following • Author (s) or editor (s) • Complete title • Source (journal title, title of web site) • Place of publication (books) • Publisher or Database Title • Date of publication • Medium

  13. Works Cited Page Specifics (HOP pg. 4 - 7) • Double-space the list of works cited.One space follows a period. • Use Hangingindent (In MS Word, Right-click, thenFormat-->Paragraph-->Hanging Indent). • Alphabetize by authors' lastnames (Last name, First name).If the source has more than one author, only invert the first author's name.If no author is listed, list the source in alphabetical order by title. • Capitalizeeachword in titles (except articles, prepositions, and conjunctions - unless one is the first word of a title or subtitle). • Italicize titles of books, journals, magazines, etc. • Use quotationmarksfortitles of articles in journals, magazines, and web pages. • Give the "medium" of the resource.Print or Web,followed by the date of access. • At BC, give the Database Company, such as EBSCOhost or Gale, following the database title

  14. Works Cited: Common Sources A periodical article in print • Author(s). "Title of Article." Title of Periodical Day Month Year: pages. Print A scholarly journal article in print • Author(s). "Title of Article: Complete with Subtitle." Title of Journal volume number. issue number (year of publication): pages. Print.

  15. More Works Cited A periodical article from an on-line database • Author(s). "Title of Article." Title of Periodical Day Month Year: pages. Title of Database. Database Provider. Web. Day Month Year of access. A scholarly journal article from an online database • Author(s). "Title of Article: Complete with Subtitle." Title of Journal volume number. issue number (year of publication) : pages. Title of database. Database provider. Web. Day Month Year of access.

  16. Sample Works Cited Page Works Cited • Bessenoff, Gayle R. “Can the Media Affect us? Social Comparison, Self-Discrepancy, and the Thin Ideal.” Psychology of Women Quarterly 30.3 (2006): 239-51. Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection. EBSCOhost. Web. 13 May 2009. • Damasio, Antonio R. "Aphasia." The New England Journal of Medicine 326.2 (1992): 531-39. Print. Credit:  Dallas Tele College Web Design Project Team & Bakersfield College Library

  17. Useful Links • Bakersfield College Libraryhttp://www.bakersfieldcollege.edu/library/ • MLA.org http://www.mla.org/ • Cornell University http://library.cornell.edu/newhelp/res_strategy/citing/mla.html#books • Purdue University http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/557/01/

  18. Works Cited • “About The MLA.” Modern Language Association. 10 Dec 2006. • “MLA Citation style.” Cornell University. 10 Dec 2006. • “MLA Documentation.” Valencia University. 10 Dec 2006. • Paradise Consulting Services. “Student Conduct.” Annapolis Valley Regional School Board. 10 Dec 2006. • Stolley, Carl. “Online Writing Lab.” Purdue University. 10 Dec 2006.

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