Skip to Main Content

Citation Styles & Evaluation Guides: Citation Styles Introduction

This guide will assist you with information about multiple citation guides using text, templates, links, PDFs, and videos

Common Citation Style Books

*Copies of these texts are available for a 2-hour checkout at the BCC Library

AMA Manual of Style 11th Edition
APA Manual of Style 7th Edition
ASA 7th edition citation guide
The Chicago Manual of Style 17th Edition IEEE Citation Style
MLA Manual of Style 9th Edition

AMA 11th Edition

APA 7th Edition ASA 7th Edition Chicago 17th Edition IEEE Style MLA 9th Edition
 

What is a citation?

A citation is a reference to the original source of a given piece of information and allows the reader to locate it themselves.

There are two kinds of citations:

  • In-text or Footnote citations: These are short references placed within the body of a work (in-text) or at the bottom of the page (footnote) within the work.
  • Full citations: These are placed at the end of a resource, located in a References, Bibliography, or Works Cited page.

Most citations include the following information:

  • Author(s): The person, group, or organization that created it.
  • Title: The name of the resource.
  • Source: Where it is published. (Location and publisher for books; journal, volume, and page number for articles.)
  • Date: When it was published.
  • URL: Uniform Resource Locator for online resources.

Why do I need to cite my sources?

In writing your research paper, you will usually use the ideas of previous authors. In order to use and build on those ideas in your paper, you must cite where information comes from.

There are three main reasons why you need to cite:

  • To acknowledge intellectual property of the original author.
  • To provide support to arguments by referring to authoritative sources.
  • To help readers verify your claims.
  • To avoid plagiarism accusations.

There are two parts to citing sources.

In-text citations and References (APA).

Footnotes or endnotes and Bibliography (Chicago). 

In-text citations and Works Cited (MLA) page. 

When do I cite a source?

You need to cite when:

  •  Quoting or using another person's exact words
  •  Paraphrasing or restating another person's ideas or thoughts in your own words
  •  Summarizing a concise statement of another person's ideas or thoughts in your own words
  •  Reusing facts, information and data; this includes your own previously published works
  •  Discussing studies, arguments, points of view

You do not need to cite:

  • Known facts and common knowledge
    • Information found in many sources
    • Information that most people know
    • Information shared by a cultural or national group
  • Your own ideas
  • Observations
  • Common sayings that are used in everyday speech

When in doubt, please cite it.