Monday 30 November 2009

Referencing resources

Students sometimes, understandably, struggle with referencing their sources. The referencing aspect of our library classes is very popular and basically we could run entirely classes on this subject. This post will look at some resources available to assist you with referencing:
Books: The library contains a fair number of books on referencing, most of which can be found starting with Dewey number 808. Clicking this will find most of them
Guides: There are a number of guides - on the library website - and elsewhere on referencing conventions. Here's the library guide to referencing, and here's a couple of podcasts on Harvard and APA referencing we created ourselves. Externally, most academic library sites have referencing guides, but we have long recommended those of Curtin University, Australia for their completeness. We also recommend the referencing section of The APA cribsheet for APA referencing guidelines.
Reference Generators: You can do pretty much anything online these days, so why not generate your references online too? Bibme is an automated reference generator for APA, MLA, Chicago and Turabian formats. Free registration allows you to create and save entire bibliographies online. Harvard format reference generated has been promised for a while now but has not yet appeared. A similar service is provided by Easybib, which only offers free trials to students. Similar to Easybib is Noodlebib which allows you to create a couple of citations for free. None of these support Harvard referencing, but you can create Harvard citations using Neil's Toolbox Harvard Reference Generator The Neil's Toolbox site looks quite interesting, including as it does a Plagiarism Tester and something called a "Lazy Researcher"
The library also recommends Zotero a fantastic add-on for the Firefox web browser. What do you mean you don't use Firefox? Zotero is a web-based reference management system akin to EndNote and Reference Manager (except that it's free). On similar lines to Zotero, except that it's not a Firebox add-on is Connotea
No matter what you do and what you use. Note the following:
1. Always cite your sources
2. Don't get bogged down in trivialities pertaining to punctuation or font styles. The bottom line, and the rationale for referencing, is: can the reader easily retrieve material that you reference?
3. Be consistent - adopt a style and stick with it; you may lose marks if your referencing jumps between formats.

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