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Age of Reform Persuasive Research Paper: CITATIONS

This guide was created for Mr. Gavron's US History Class

CITING SOURCES

CITATIONS: Sources of information are cited in order to give the original authors/creators proper credit for their work and to document where an author heard or read the fact or idea that has been incorporated into a new work. The purpose of citations is to let the reader know where you obtained information so sources can easily be located and consulted.

All resources you use must be cited, including creative commons resources 

Citations should include: 
Author, Title, and where you retrieved it from (book, website, newspaper, magazine...)

Below you will find tools to aid and guide you in completing your assignments and properly citing your sources. You are always welcome to come to the library to get help with citing sources, evaluating sources, choosing a database, and conducting research! 

WORKS CITED

Directions to create your in-text citations and Works Cited using Google Docs.

PURDUE OWL

The Online Writing Lab (OWL) at Purdue University houses writing resources and instructional material, that are provide as a free service. Students, members of the community, and users worldwide will find information to assist with many writing projects. 

MLA IN-TEXT CITATIONS

CITING SOURCES

AVOIDING PLAGIARISM

Remember - It is perfectly acceptable to borrow information or ideas from other sources; but, when you do so, you have to let your audience know that's what you've done! 

Any time you borrow someone else's work (words, images, video, audio) or ideas (infor you didn't know before you saw it, even if it's paraphrased), you MUST cite it (let your audience know which bits are borrowed). If you don't you are plagiarizing. 

Unsure of what is considered plagiarism? WHS Academic Integrity Policy

PLAGIARISM