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Works Cited

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Page 1: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

Works Cited

Page 2: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

Purpose

• The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from.

• By citing your sources, you are proving that you are an expert on the topic you have written about.

• Citing your sources also prevents plagiarism.

• Finally, citing your sources makes your argument credible. You have no claim if you have no textual evidence!

Page 3: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

Basic Rules

• Works Cited comes at the end of your paper and is on a separate sheet of paper.

• The title is to be centered and labeled “Works Cited”.

• The works cited should be double spaced and not have spaces between entries.

• This page should have the same font size and style as your paper.

• All lines of the citation are indented EXCEPT the first line.

• Citations should be listed in alphabetical order.

Page 4: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

General Guidelines

• The first page should include:• Your name, your instructor’s name, the

course, and date. • This should be types in the upper left hand

corner and should be double spaced.

• The title should be below this information, centered in the middle of the page, and should be the same font as the rest of your paper.

Page 5: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

Example

Page 6: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

General Guidelines Cont.

• The paper, and therefore the Works Cited page should be:• Double Spaced• 12 pt. Times New Roman font• One space after periods/punctuation marks• 1 in. margins• Indent the first line of each paragraph• Number pages in the Header with your last

name (Example: Buenger 1, Buenger 2, etc.)

Page 7: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

Works Cited

• Book With One Author

Author’s last name, first name. Title of Book. City of Publication: Publisher, Year of Publication. Print.

• Example:

Henley, Patricia. The Hummingbird House. Denver: MacMurray, 1999. Print

Page 8: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

In Your Small Group

• One person from your group retrieve a book (a novel) from the book shelf.

• As a group, cite your source.

• Each group member needs to write it in his or her notes.

Page 9: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

• Book with More Than One Author

Author’s Last name, First name, and First name Last name. Title of Book. City of Publication: Publisher, Year of Publication. Print.

*Note: Authors should be listed alphabetically by last name.

*Note: If there is an edition, then the edition number goes after the title and before the city of publication.

Page 10: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

• With your group cite your textbook.

• Each group member needs to write this in his or her notes.

Page 11: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

• Periodicals – Newspapers, magazines, journals, etc.

Author(s). “Title of Article.” Title of Periodical Day Month Year: pages. Print.

• Example:

Poniewozik, James. “TV Makes a Too-Close Call.” Time 20 Nov. 2000: 70-71. Print.

Page 12: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

• One member from your group retrieve a newspaper OR magazine from the front table.

• As a group, cite this source.

• Each group member needs this written down in his or her notes.

Page 13: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

• Website

Editor, author, or compiler name. “Title of Web Page.” Title of Web Site. Publishing Organization, Day Month Year Published. Web. Day Month Year accessed.

• Example:

Felluga, Dino. Guide to Literary and Critical Theory. Purdue U, 28 Nov. 2003. Web. 12, Nov. 2013.

*Note: Some instructors will ask for the URL in the citation as well. If so, write the citation after the date of access.

Page 14: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

• As a group, cite the following source.

• Each group member needs the source written in his or her notes.

• Source Info:• Title: SeaWorld challenges ban limiting

interaction between whale and trainer• Author: Vivian Kuo• Name of Site: CNN U.S.• Publishing Organization: Cable News Network• Date Published: November 12, 2013• Date Retrieved: November 12, 2013• URL:

http://www.cnn.com/2013/11/12/us/seaworld-court-challenge/index.html?hpt=us_c1

Page 15: Works Cited. Purpose The purpose of citing your sources is to inform the reader of where your information came from. By citing your sources, you are proving

Works Cited

The Purdue OWL. Purdue U Writing Lab, 2010. Web. 12 Nov. 2013.

• OR

The Purdue OWL. Purdue U Writing Lab, 2010. Web. 12 Nov. 2013. https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/677/01/.