Citing in APA style (library fcj version march 2014) Why APA? APA citation style refers to the rules and conventions established by the American Psychological Association for documenting sources used in a research paper. APA style requires both in-text citations and a reference list. For every in-text citation there should be a full citation in the reference list and vice versa. The examples of APA styles and formats listed on this page include many of the most common types of sources used in academic research. In APA style, in-text citations are placed within sentences and paragraphs so that it is clear what information is being quoted or paraphrased and whose information is being cited. (source: https://www.library.cornell.edu/resrch/citmanage/apa) Why citation? If you use information without referring to your source, it is plagiarism. And plagiarism is considered to be fraud. If you are writing an essay or a (research) paper, you often start by doing desk research: you research what has been written about the topic. To inform your readers about your use of sources and to present your text as professional and reliable, you have to cite your sources twice (!). You quote or paraphrase the information with a short citation and you mention the source in your reference list at the end of your report. When do you paraphrase? Paraphrasing is reproducing information using your own words. It is preferable to direct quotations. Paraphrasing is allowed if you cite your source correctly (see the table below). When do you use direct quotations? Only use direct quotations if really necessary. For instance: if a thought, view or argumentation is described so uniquely that you cannot improve on it. You have to learn to write your own papers using paraphrases where possible: that means using your own words. Direct quotations are allowed if you cite your source correctly (see the table below). In your text Copy exact text < 40 words Quote Copy exact text > 40 words Paraphrase Describe the information in your own words Citation -Text between quotation marks -After the quote: author’s surname, and year of publication between parentheses - Use an indented line, without quotation marks. -After the quote: author’s surname and year of publication, between parentheses According to author (year of publication) ….. Example “In the Netherlands live 30,000 Chinese people” (Jansen, 2013) There are people of many different nationalities living in the Netherlands. In the Netherlands live 30.000 Chinese……………………………………… ….…………………..………….(CBS, 2013) According to Jansen (2013) the Dutch community exists of… Or Or After the paraphrased text: author’s surname and year of publication, between parentheses The Chinese community exists of …etc. (Jansen, 2013) The APA guidelines for citations are on the back of the paper. However, it is also possible to use programs that will insert citations in the correct style, these include: - - Word: You have quoted or paraphrased text, move the cursor to the end of this text: and choose, in the th menu bar, for ‘references’ > APA 6 edition. > insert quotation > new source > fill in layout. At the end of your document, you can add your reference list, using ‘resource maagement’ (be careful, Word is not completely reliable, so always check if the reference style is correct). Refworks: you can use this online program once you have registered. For more information go to: www.library.hu.nl > support > APA citation style or ask for a training via [email protected] Source Book with 1 author Citation (Dawson, 2009) Reference list Author, A.A. (year). Title and subtitle. Place: Publisher Book with 2 or more authors Book with 6 or more authors (Solomon, Barnossy & Askegaard, 2013) (Chaffey et al., 2013) Place an ampersand (&) in front of the last surname Books by the same author published in the same year Journal article (Kotler, 2013a, 2013b) Newspaper article (Ward, 2014) Newspaper article found via LexisNexis (Ward, 2014) Text from website (Cohen, 2014) Author, A.A. (year). Title of the document. Consulted on date, via http://url Video from Youtube (University of Applied Sciences Utrecht, 2010) Creator (year, day month) Topic. [Videofile]. Consulted on day month year via http://url University of Applied Sciences Utrecht (2010, 2 February). Students tell about ICM [Videofile]. Consulted on March the 3rd 2014, via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1J6tcwR9S0 U Table In table 1 you see.. (Eurostat, 2014) and... Creator (year). Topic table [Datafile]. Retrieved from http://url Eurostat (2014). Population of the year [Datafile].Retrieved from http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/tgm/table.do?ta b=table&language=en&pcode=tps00001&tableS election=1&footnotes=yes&labeling=labels&plugi n=1 Tweet (Wester, F. 2013) Author, A. [First name, surname] (data). Text. [Tweet]. Retrieved from http://url Wester, F. [fritswester] (28 January 2013). Tonight 19.00h speech of the queen on television #abdication. [Tweet]. Retrieved from https://twitter.com/fritswester/status/2959252956 03658752 (Bruun, 2014) In case of eight or more authors the first six names are mentioned, then the ellipsis (...), followed by the sixth author, without an ampersand (&). Author, A.A. (year a). Title and subtitle. Place: Publisher Author, A.A. (year b). Title and subtitle Place: Publisher Author, A.A. (year). Title of the article: subtitle. Name journal, volume (issue number), p. xx-xx Author, A. (date). Title of the article. Name newspaper, p. xx-xx. Author, A.A. (date). Title of the article [Database]. Name newspaper. Consulted on date via http://url Example Dawson, C. (2009). Introduction to Research Methods: A practical guide for anyone th undertaking a research project (4 ed.). London: How to books Solomon, M., Barnossy, G. & Askegaard, S. (2013). Consumer Behaviour: A European Perspective. Harlow: Pearson Education. Chaffey, D., Ellis-Chadwick, F., Mayer, R., Johnston, K., Chaffey, D., (….) Ellis-Chadwick, F. (2013). Internet Marketing: Strategy, Implementation and Practice. Essex: Pearson Education (example with 4 authors so I used Chaffey en Ellis-Chadwick twice) Kotler, P. (2013a). Marketing for Hospitality and Tourism (6th ed.). Harlow: Pearson th Kotler, P. (2013b). Principles of Marketing (6 ed.). Amsterdam: Pearson Bruun, H. (2014). Conceptualizations of the audience in political talk show production. European Journal of Communication, 29 (01), p 3-16 Ward, L. (2014, 21 March). Access to student data sold to phone and drinks firms. The guardian weekly, p. 16. Ward, L. (2014, 21 March). Access to student data sold to phone and drinks firms. [LexisNexis]. The Guardian Weekly. Consulted on March 21, 2014, via http://academic.lexisnexis.nl/ Cohen, H. (2014). 20 Best Content Distribution Platforms. Consulted on March the 3rd 2014, via http://heidicohen.com/best-contentdistribution-platforms-research-chart/ Your reference list contains an overview of all the sources you have used, in alphabetical order, by surname of the first author.
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