What is plagiarism?
Plagiarism is passing off someone
else’s work, whether intentionally or unintentionally, as your own for your own
benefit
-Quoted in Jude Carroll (2002), A Handbook for Deterring Plagiarism, Oxford : Oxford
Brookes University ;
9.
Please refer to the College’s (and your award body’s) Plagiarism Policy for more details and on the consequences of plagiarising someone else’s work.
This system uses a ‘flag’
(usually the authors surname and date of publication in brackets) in your text
at the point where you make reference to another author’s work. This
referencing system is also author-date
system because of its use of the author-date ‘flag’.
known as the
known as the
Referring to an
author’s ideas/work in general (when not referring to a specific page)
1 For a single author:
The traditional position (Smith, 1989) has now been
surpassed by a more modern approach (Johnson, 2005).
2 For works with two
authors:
It has been argued (Smith and Jones, 1982) …
3 For works by more
than two authors use the first authors name and et al. (et alia is Latin
for ‘and others’):
Some commentators (Stephenson et al., 1987) have argued that …
4 When referring to more
than one work:
Others (Enfield, 1996; Whitehouse, 1994) contradict this
viewpoint …
1 When referring to a single
page:
This has now been disproved (Everitt, 2006; 6).
2 When referring to
multiple pages:
The best study (Vaughan ,
2001; 56-67) …
Second-hand
references
Also known as ‘secondary sources’ – this is when you cite or
quote a work which you have not consulted directly but which you saw cited in
another work e.g.
Research recently carried out (Jones, 2001 cited in Davies,
2006; 67-8) …
Referring to a work
when the author is mentioned in the
text
Only the date and pages are bracketed:
Morecombe (1998; 67-70) illustrates this approach …
Referring to an
author who has published more than
one work in the same year
Assign each work a letter alphabetically:
This view is now seen as outdated (Wise, 2006b)…
Referring to works
with no date
If you know roughly the year that the work was published in,
then use the abbreviation c for circa
(about) e.g. (Jones, c2000). If you do not know the publication date then use
n.d. (no date) e.g. (Smith, n.d.).
Referring to works
with no author
Give the title (in italics if it is a complete work or
without italics if the work is part of another work e.g. if it is an unsigned
newspaper article) followed by the date.
Referring to images,
diagrams, tables or works of art
When referencing in your text then use the same conventions
as for written works. A whole table or diagram can be incorporated into your
work and referenced with the author and date. If you have adapted the table or
diagram you will need to state this.
All photographic images (or still images from films) are
copyrighted so should include a copyright notice and you will need the
permission of the rights holder if you want to reproduce the image for
publication of your article.
General references to works of art (e.g. literature,
paintings, photographs etc) only require the name of the author (or artist) and
the title of the work (in italics) – you do not normally have to include the
date the work was produced e.g. In Orwell’s Animal
Farm the character of ….
For works of art you should state the dimensions - these can
be put in brackets under the image you have used.
Quotations
1 For short
quotations:
Quotations of up to two lines in length can be included in
the body of your text and are shown by using single quotation marks (‘) around
the text e.g.
Plagiarism can be defined as ‘passing off someone else’s
work, whether intentionally or unintentionally, as your own for your own
benefit’ (Caroll, 2002; 9).
2 For long quotations:
Quotations should be indented and in a new paragraph – they
do not need quotation marks e.g.
If there’s unanimity about any
aspect of the Information Age economy, it’s that you have a better chance of
getting a gold watch from a street vendor than you do from a corporation
(Stewart, 1997; 136).
3 For quotations
within quotations:
Quotations within quotations need to be in double quotation
marks (“) in short quotations and in single quotation marks (‘) in long
quotations e.g.
Mrs Gorse replies that ‘Master Miles only said “We must do
nothing but what she likes!”’.
At the end of your assignment you will have a list of works
(books, websites, films etc) you have referred to – these will be headed ‘References’. References should be
listed alphabetically by author in the formats given below. You will also have
a Bibliography which is the list of
works you have looked at but not referred to in your assignment. These are also
listed alphabetically by the author’s surname and the format is the same as for
references.
You may find it more convenient to present your sources in a
table (as in the examples below) or by using indents. When using tables the
author-date goes in the first column and the other details in the second column
- this makes it easier to sort references alphabetically.
Books
Author’s surname, Initials, (year and letter if there is
more than one worked listed for that
author in that year), title of the book in italics with the first letter of all
principal words capitalized – separate the title from the sub title by using a
colon, edition, place of publication : publisher e.g.
Buckley Owen, T. (2003b)
|
Success at the
Enquiry Desk: Successful Enquiry Answering – Every Time, 4th
edn,
|
British Broadcasting Corporation (2005)
|
Satisfying the
viewer,
|
Articles in books
The title of the article appears in single quotes, the
reference should finish with the full page range for that article:
Martin, A. (2003)
|
‘Towards E-literacy’ in Information and IT Literacy: Enabling Learning in the 21st
Century, ed. by Martin, A. and Rader, H.,
|
Articles in journals
The journal name is shown in italics and the volume number
is put before the page numbers of the whole article:
Spikes, J.D. (1970)
|
‘The Jacobean History Play and the Myth of the Elect
Nation’, Renaissance Drama, 8,
117-149.
|
Articles in
newspapers
The newspaper is shown in italics and the date of the
original article is put before the page numbers:
Raphael, F. (1978)
|
‘
|
Theses/Dissertations
Unlike for books the title is given in quotation marks
rather than being italicized:
Ingram, R. (1988)
|
‘Historical Drama in
|
Audio visual works
(films, CDs etc)
Unlike for books the place of publication is not required.
Cond. can be used to show conductors of classical works and Dir. for film
directors:
Clash (1977)
|
|
Shostakovich, D. (1984)
|
Symphony No. 2,
Wiener Philharmoniker, Cond. Giulini, C.M.,
|
The Grapes of Wrath
(1940) Dir. Ford, J., 20th Century Fox.
|
Unpublished works
References are the same as for a book but include a note on
the unpublished nature of the work:
Kregel, J.A. (1989)
|
Factors in Business
Investment, unpublished conference paper presented at the New Business
Technologies conference,
|
Official Publications
The author of these documents should usually be given as the
Government Department responsible rather than an individual. Therefore the
report of the Leitch Review would be:
HM Treasury (2006)
|
Prosperity for All
in the Global Economy: World Class Skills,
|
The author is included as for books (this may be a corporate
author if only the organisation responsible for the website is known). The web
address and the date accessed are given as in the example below:
Aldrich, C. (2000)
|
Learning Portals and
the E-learning Hype Cycle, http://gartner.jmu.edu/research/ras/86903.html,
accessed on 17 May 2005.
|
E-mails and online
discussion lists/blogs
These should include the author’s name or e-mail address
(where known), the subject/discussion heading, the name of the recipient(s), the
date sent/posted, the web address and
the date accessed (for discussion lists/blogs etc) e.g.
Jones, J. j.jones@jones.com
(2005)
|
Mobile phone
developments, message to R.G. Schmidt (r.g.schmidt@nowhere.ac.uk), sent
7 June 2005, 08:13, www.gog.defer.com/archive123/
, accessed 7 July 2006.
|
Personal
Communication
This would be an interview or informal discussion with the
person cited. In the body of the text this would be noted as follows:
Most teacher training providers in England have been implementing a
mentoring approach since 2005 (pers.comm. Hooker, 2006).
Usually you would
not include a reference for this type of citation in your list of references
because it cannot be checked by the reader.
Works with no author
These are arranged by title, with the year of publication
given after the title (see The Grapes of
Wrath film example above). These can go at start of your list of references
or file them in with the authors by treating the title as the author’s surname.
Example list of
references (using a table)
British Broadcasting Corporation (2005)
|
Satisfying the
viewer,
|
Buckley Owen, T. (2003a)
|
Does Informa's recent acquisition of
Datamonitor change the market research information landscape?, Information World Review, 12
July, 14-15.
|
Buckley Owen, T. (2003b)
|
Success at the
Enquiry Desk: Successful Enquiry Answering – Every Time, 4th
edn,
|
Clash (1977)
|
|
Martin, A. (2003)
|
‘Towards E-literacy’ in Information and IT Literacy: Enabling Learning in the 21st
Century, ed. by Martin, A. and Rader, H.,
|
Shostakovich, D. (1984)
|
Symphony No. 2,
Wiener Philharmoniker, Cond. Giulini, C.M.,
|
Example list of
references (without using a table)
British Broadcasting Corporation (2005), Satisfying the viewer,
|
Buckley Owen, T. (2003a), Does Informa's recent acquisition of
Datamonitor change the market research information landscape?, Information World Review, 12
July, 14-15.
|
Buckley Owen, T. (2003b), Success at the Enquiry Desk: Successful Enquiry Answering – Every
Time, 4th edn,
|
Clash (1977),
|
Martin, A. (2003), ‘Towards E-literacy’ in Information and IT Literacy: Enabling
Learning in the 21st Century, ed. by Martin, A. and Rader, H.,
|
Shostakovich, D. (1984), Symphony No. 2, Wiener Philharmoniker, Cond. Giulini, C.M.,
|











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