Research Methods 3
Research Methods 3
Academic Writing
Is a Must
Why Reference?
What is
Plagiarism?
Referencing Styles
Referencing Types
• In text (direct-Indirect----
Short-Long)
• Footnote
• Endnote
• Reference List
• Bibliography
• MHRA: For English Literature, MHRA (Modern Humanities Research Association) is most
preferred. It distinguishes all topics such as poems, novels as primary texts and additional
information as secondary texts. In most of the cases, it is the footnotes mentioned for primary as
well as secondary texts. This method is also a reference style for film, television and theatre.
• Oxford: It is also written as footnotes and in-text citations.
• APA: It stands for the American Psychological Association. It is considered as the variant of the
Harvard style of referencing. Here there is a little change in the rule or else most of them remain
the same. The major difference is that brief author-date citations will be in brackets in the body
and full citations will be in the reference list.
• Harvard: Some professionals called it author-date style because it uses the author surname for in-
text citations in brackets in the body. The author surname with date and the page number is used
in the reference page. Full details will present in the reference list or bibliography. You might
think that it has many sets of rules but it is the style of referencing.
• Vancouver: It is the simple way of providing numeric value to the page or each source. It includes
a single numerical list with full details. As per the needs, students can add a separate page for
author name, bibliography and other details. (natural science research)
• AMS: It is called as American Meteorological Society style of referencing. According to the
reports, it is recommended by the Department of Meteorology. (atmosphere and weather).
• Chicago: It comprises of two different styles that give an option to the students. They can choose
between listing citations in the body as in Harvard style and list them properly in footnotes just
as Oxford style. If you are willing to use this referencing, you must ensure that whether your
university is following any specific pattern for a particular type of project or not. This makes sure
that you can acquire good grades without any troubles.
• OSCOLA: It stands for Oxford Standard for the Citation Of Legal Authorities. As the name
suggests, it is preferred by law students. It has a set of rules to reference cases, command papers
and statues. If you are a new student and want to acquire good grades, you have to devote your
time and understand the process of locating in-text citation in footnotes. Other than this, you
need to comprehend abbreviations for main sources and punctuation.
Citation
• As general rules of thumb:
If you didn’t know it before you read the
research, then it is not common knowledge
and you need to reference it.
• If most classmates would know it then it
probably is common knowledge.
What kind of information do I need to reference?
•Pamphlets or brochures;
•Personal interviews;
Who? Author/Creator
When? Date
What? Title
Where? Source
Books
Book Chapter
How to cite Images, diagrams and artistic
works
• In-Text Citation (Paraphrase):
• (Artist Surname, Year)
• In-Text Citation (Quotation):
• (Artist Surname, Year)
• References:
• Artist Surname, First Initial. Second Initial. (Year). Title of the artwork [Format]. Retrieved from URL
(address of web site)
• Reference (No Author)
Title of work [Type of work]. (Year image was created).
Retrieved from URL (address of web site)
• Reference (No Author, No Title, No Date)
Many images found on the Web fall under this category.
Try to locate the missing information by clicking on the image,
and/or looking at the bottom of the image.
[Subject and type of work]. Retrieved from URL (address of web site)
Academic Journal Article
Citation Elements – Review Article
Recognize scholarly articles
• Scholarly articles are not usually found in magazines in a
dentist’s office or hairdresser salon
• Scholarly articles are peer reviewed—that is, other scholars read
all the articles and approve them for publication.
• These articles have section headings, abstracts, and “summary”
and/or “conclusion” headings. They determine the author’s
main idea.
• They refer to works of other scholars (Reference Page, in-text
citations, author credentials, notes, in depth analysis, uses
academic or technical language for informed readers, appears in
journals that don’t include colorful advertisements, etc.
• Important Links:
• Academic Journal Database:
https://www.scribendi.com/whitepapers/101_Free_Online_Journal_a
nd_Research_Databases_for_Academics_Free_Resource.pdf
• http://www.library.nscc.ca/documents/researchassistance/apa_guide
.pdf
Referencing software
• Refworks:
https://www.refworks.com/refworks2/default.aspx?r=authentication:
:init
• Zotero: https://www.zotero.org
• EndNote: https://endnote.com
• Mendeley: https://www.mendeley.com/?interaction_required=true
• Citeulike: http://www.citeulike.org
• Google Scholar.