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Writing Your Reference List

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Page 1: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Writing Your Reference List

Page 2: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page.

Only include references you have cited in your work.

References should be listed alphabetically by the last name of the first author of each work.

Reference List

Page 3: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

The essential elements of a full APA Reference:

Book title Name of author Place of publication Date of publication Publisher Edition

Books

Page 4: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Author’s last name & first initial (date of publication). Title. city of publication: the publisher.

Halliday, M. A. K. (1994). An introduction to functional grammar (2nd ed.). London: Edward Arnold.

Books: One Author

Page 5: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Gellner, E. (1983). Nations and nationalism. NY: Cornell University Press.

Sayigh, R. (2007). The Palestinians: From

peasants to revolutionaries (new ed.). London: Zed Books.

Books: One Author

Page 6: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Kharma, N., & Hajjaj, A. (1989). Errors in English among Arabic speakers:

Analysis and remedy (2nd ed.). London: Longman.

Collins, B., & Mees, I. M. (2006). Practical phonetics and phonology: A resource book for students (3rd ed.). New York: Routledge.

Books: Two Authors

Page 7: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Celce-Murcia, M., Brinton, D., & Goodwin, J. (1996). Teaching pronunciation: A

reference for teachers of English to speakers of other languages. New York: Cambridge University Press.

Klatzky, R. L., Abel, S. E., Fox, P. T., & Posner, J. P. (1980). Human memory: Structures and processes (2nd ed.).

San Francisco: Friedman.

Books: Three to Five Authors

Page 8: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Book title: International Media and the Arab Spring

Name of author: Thomas Armstrong Place of publication: London Date of publication: 2012 Publisher: Routledge

Armstrong, T. (2012). International media

and the Arab spring. London: Routledge.

Exercise 1: Provide Reference details to the following works

Page 9: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Book title: Palestine and the Palestinians: A social and Political History

Name of author: Samih Farsoun and Nasir Aruri

Place of publication: Colorado Date of publication: 2006 Publisher: Westview Press Edition: Second edition

Farsoun, S, & Aruri, N. (2006). Palestine and the Palestinians: A social and political history (2nd ed.). Colorado: West Press.

Page 10: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Chapter Title

Name of chapter author

Name of book

Name of book editor

Date of publication

Pages

Place of publication

Publisher

Chapter in edited book

Page 11: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

- Chapter Title: September 11 and the structural limitations of US Journalism

- Name of chapter author: Robert McChensey

- Name of book: Journalism after September 11-Name of book editor : Barbie Zelizer

-Date of publication: 2002-Pages: 91-100-Place of publication: New York -Publisher: Routledge

McChensey, R. (2002). September 11 and the structural limitations of US Journalism. In B. Zelizer (Ed.), Journalism after September 11 (pp. 91-100). New York: Routledge.

Page 12: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Richards, C. (1997). Views on globalization. In H. L. Vivaldi (Ed.), Australia in a global world (pp. 29-43). North Ryde, Australia: One Century.Kreber, C. (2001). The scholarship of teaching and its implementation. In D. Adams (Ed.), Scholarship revisited: Perspectives on the scholarship of teaching (pp. 34-51). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Chapter in edited book

Page 13: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Chapter Title: Arab Public Opinion in the Age of Satellite Television

Name of chapter author(s): Mohamed Zayani

Name of book editor(s): Elizabeth Poole and John Richardson Title of edited book: Muslims and the News Media

Year of publication: 2006

Pages: 171-187

Publisher: I.B. Touris

Place of publication: London

Page 14: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Chapter Title: Arab Public Opinion in the Age of Satellite Television

Name of chapter author(s): Mohamed Zayani

Name of book editor(s): Elizabeth Poole and John Richardson

Title of edited book: Muslims and the News Media

Year of publication: 2006

Pages: 171-187

Publisher: I.B. Touris

Place of publication: London

Zayani, M. (2006). Arab public opinion in the age of satellite television. In E. Poole & J. Richardson (Eds.), Muslims and the news media (pp. 171-187). London: I.B. Touris.

Page 15: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Article Title:

Title of journal:

Name of author:

Date of publication:

Volume number:

Issue number:

Page numbers:

Journal Article

Page 16: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Article Title: Propaganda and Psychological Warfare

Title of journal: Media Studies

Name of author: Steve Hyon

Date of publication: 1998

Volume number: 30

Issue number: 4

Page numbers: 693- 722

Hyon, S. (1998). Propaganda and psychological warfare. Media Studies, 30(4), 693- 722.

Journal Article

Page 17: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Author’s last name & first initial (date of publication). Title. Journal

name, volume, issue, pages.

Kress, G. (1990). Critical discourse analysis. Annual Review of Applied Linguistics ,11(3), 84-99.

Journal Article

Page 18: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Article Title: Arab Politics and the Rise of Palestinian

Nationalism

Title of journal: Journal of Palestine Studies

Name of author: Mohammed Muslih

Date of publication: 1987

Volume number: 16

Issue number : 4

Page numbers: 77-94

Muslih, M. (1987). Arab politics and the rise of Palestinian nationalism. Journal of

Palestine Studies, 16(4), 77-94.

Page 19: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Author’s last name, first initial (date listed on page or n.d.). Title of webpage. Retrieved from URL (internet address).

Smitherman, T. & Thompson, J. (2002). “Writing Our Stories”: An anti-violence creative writing program. Journal of Correctional Education, 53(2), 77-83. Retrieved from http://static.ashland.edu/centers/gill/edjournal

Website

Page 20: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Altmann, H. (2006). The perception and production of second language stress: A cross-linguistic experimental study (Unpublished PhD thesis), University of Delaware, USA. Retrieved from http://ling.uni-konstanz.de/pages/home/altmann/papers/Altmann-dissertation.pdf

Website

Page 21: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

University of Sydney (2010). Guide to copyright. Retrieved March 21, 2011, from http://sydney.edu.au/copyright/students/coursework.shtml#who

Web page with no page numbers

Page 22: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

New child vaccine gets funding boost. (2001). Retrieved April 16, 2012, from http://news.ninemsn.com.au/health/story_13178.asp

Web page with no author

Page 23: Writing Your Reference List. Your references should appear at the end of your work on a separate page. Only include references you have cited in your

Duddle, M. (2009). Intraprofessional relations in nursing: A case study (Unpublished doctoral thesis), University of Sydney, Australia.

Lacey, D. (2011). The role of humiliation in collective political violence

(Masters thesis, University of Sydney, Australia). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2123/7128

Unpublished PhD or MA Thesis