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Citing Sources

Introduction to Citation Styles

This guide will help you understand and apply different citation styles when writing research papers. The two styles that are most frequently used by our faculty are MLA and Chicago. This guide provides examples of citations using each of these styles. Always check with your professor to see which citation style is required for the class.

MLA Chicago

Cite Your Sources

Why Cite Sources?

Avoid Plagiarizing

You must cite any direct quotation, summary, or paraphrase of any idea or fact from your research. Citing sources is giving credit to the original author and publication where you found the information. When in doubt, cite. For more information on avoiding plagiarism, click here

Acknowledge Other's Work

Part of your research is built upon the research of other people. It is respectful and fair to give them credit for their hard work (just as you would hope someone would give you credit if they were quoting your own work!)

Lend Authority to Your Research 

By referencing the work of scholars and other professionals, you demonstrate that your own research is based on solid, reliable information and that you are capable of critical thinking by being able to synthesize that research into your own.

Provide a Path 

By citing sources, you provide the information readers of your paper need in order to locate the same sources that you did.