Parenthetical Citations Works Cited Page Parenthetical Citations Books
Parenthetical Citations & Works Cited Page
Parenthetical Citations (Books) • Author’s name and page number included in text. Example: During World War I, British and American women could, for the first time, earn first-class pay for first-class work (Gilbert 236 -7). Example: Pope was clear to point out that, although many of his ideas were idealistic, Rousseau held ambivalent feelings toward women (138). Example: According to Foulke's study, dreams may express "profound aspects of personality" (184).
Parenthetical Citations (Website) • Author’s name or title of article (or partial title) in parenthesis. Example: “Life is hard, but one must persevere” (Sweeny). Example: Classroom management is one of the most important skills for new teachers to hone (Classroom Management).
Works Cited Page (book) Author’s last name, Author’s first name. Title. City: Publisher, Year. Print. Cohen, Louis. A Guide to Teaching Practice. New York: Routledge-Falmer, 2004. Print.
Works Cited Page (website) “Title of Article. ” Name of site. Date of posting or revision. Name of Publisher. Date of Access. Web. <web address>. “Top Eight Reasons Why Non-Teachers Can Never Really Understand Our Job” Beth Lewis. 3 March 2010. Web. <http: //k 6 educators /classroommanagement/. htm >.
Works Cited Page Rules • Works cited page is on a separate piece of paper • 1 inch margins • Sources are listed in ABC order • Second line of each source is indented • Double spaced
Sample Works Cited Page 1 Inch ½ Inch Ramirez 4 Works Cited 1 Inch Covey, Sean. The 6 Most Important Decisions You’ll Ever Make. New York: Simon & Shuster, Inc, 2006. Print. 1 Inch “Top Eight Reasons Why Non-Teachers Can Never Really Understand Our Job” 3 March 2010. Web <http: //k 6 educators/classroommanagement/. htm>. 1 Inch
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