Title: MLA Format
1MLA Format
- In-text Citations
-
- Works Cited
2Whats MLA and why do we need it?
- MLA stands for Modern Language Association, an
organization supporting the teaching and study of
language and literature. With more than 30,000
members in 100 countries, the MLA sets standards
for publishing in the humanities.
3Whats MLA and why do we need it?
- The Modern Language Association devised a logical
system for documenting outside sources. You will
use this system, MLA documentation, for giving
credit to outside sources in your paper.
4Whats MLA and why do we need it?
- If you use any information or ideas from an
outside source, you must either Quote the
source exactly or rewrite the information in 100
your own words and sentence structure.
5Whats MLA and why do we need it?
- Following ALL instances of paraphrasing and/or
quoting from sources, you must include
information about where the information came
fromin other words, the source.
6MLA formatting has 2 main functions
- 1 In-text citations
- Found in the body of the paper itself
- Appears in the paper every time an outside source
is either quoted or paraphrased. - Parenthesis containing the authors last name and
page number of source - Citations look like this (Smith 25).
- 2 Works Cited
- Found at the end of the paper.
- Lists all sources that have been used and cited
in the paper. - .Alphabetized by authors last name or titles
first word. - Authors names appearing in the paper should also
appear on the works cited. - All publication information must be recorded in
correct MLA format.
7In-text citations
- Student Paraphrase
- Arthur C. Clarke, author of 2001 A Space
Odyssey, a 1968 novel that introduced the concept
of artificial intelligence to general audiences,
predicts that in a mere thirty-six years, people
will no longer have to work. He predicts that a
device called the Universal Replicator will use
nanotechnology to change matter from one form to
another. With the ability to create all
necessities from common substances, by 2040,
people will not need to work in order to survive
(Clark 73). - Note the paraphrased information in blue and the
in-text citation at the end. Only the authors
last name and page number are included in the
in-text citation. The rest of the information
will be included in the works cited. -
- Original Passage from book
- In 2040, The Universal Replicator, based on
nanotechnology, is perfected any object, however
complex, can be created - given the necessary raw
material and the appropriate information matrix.
Diamonds or gourmet meals can, literally, be made
from dirt. As a result, agriculture and industry
are phased out, ending that recent invention in
human history - work! - Source
- Author? Arthur Clarke
- Title? Optimism for Tomorrow (book)
- Quote found on page 73.
- Published by? Penguin Putnam, New York
- Year? 2003
8In-text citations important terms Paraphrase
- Paraphrasing explaining the sources ideas in
100 your own words.
9In-text citations important term Paraphrase
- Paraphrasing means that you READ the source first
and understand what it says. - Then, after putting the source out of sight
(closing the book, switching screens etc...)
recall the sources ideas and write them in your
own words.
10In-text citations important term Paraphrase
- Simply plugging in different words or writing a
patchwork paraphrase ( ½ your words ½
sources words) is plagiarism.
11In-text citations important term Quote
- Direct Quote A direct quote is...
- the sources exact words,
- copied accurately,
- word for word,
- and surrounded with quotation marks.
- After using a direct quote from a source, you
must include an in-text citation immediately
after the end of the quote .
12In-text citations No Author
- When you have a source with no author listed
(remember that you should always apply the
evaluation criteria to all sources assume the
examples here come from valid sources), use the
TITLE (or an abbreviated title) in the in-text
citation. - For example
- (paraphrasing information from an article
--note the quotation marks that indicate
article) - Several Wordsworth critics once encouraged people
to cover their ears when Wordsworth poems were
read, because they believed listeners would
become depressed and whiny, just like Wordsworth
himself ("Wordsworth Is a Loser" 100).
13In-text citations No Author contd
- (Quoting information from a website--note the
underlining that indicates website) - A recently published cartoon responded to the
debate about genetically altered foods. It
depicts the Garden of Eden, with Eve saying to
the Serpent, I wont take a bite if its been
genetically altered as he tries to tempt her
(Cartoon Stock). - Note that websites do not have page numbers, as
pages are numbered by the printer if we had
giant paper, we may have one page if we used
tiny paper, we may have 100.
14In-text citations Some Donts for Authorless
sources...
- Do not ever, ever, ever use www.addressofwebsite.c
om in an in-text citation! - Do not use something weird such as (no author
listed) or (anonymous) or (unknown) in your
in-text citation. - Do not use the name of the publication (Newsweek
or Harvard Business Journal or Expanded Academic
ASAP) in your in-text citation. - USE THE TITLE if you do not have an author!
15Works Cited
Note the works Cited page should be
double-spaced its single spaced here to save
room.
- Works Cited
- Ehrenreich, Barbara. Nickel Dimed, On (Not)
Getting By in America. New York Holt Publishing,
2001. - ---. Home Page. 2006. July 22, 2006.
lthttp//www.barbaraehrenreich.com/gt. - Hightower, James. How Wal-Mart is Remaking Our
World. Hightower Lowdown. April 26, 2002. July
23, 2006ltwww.hightowrlowdown.comgt. - Smith, John. . Trying to Survive on Minimum
Wage...can it be done? New York Times 3 Oct.
2002 A20. Expanded Academic ASAP. Tidewater
Community College Library, Portsmouth VA. 20
July, 2006 lthttp//www.gale.comgt.
Barbara Ehrenreichs Home Page http//www.barbara
ehrenreich.com/
Hightower Lowdown website Jim Hightower How
Wal-Mart is Remaking our World Article about
Wal-Mart April 2002 www.hightowerlowdown.com
Expanded Academic ASAP Database Article Smith,
John. Trying to Survive on Minimum Wage...can it
be done? NY Times, C7 (May 2005) Expanded
Academic ASAP. Gale Group. Info about the
working poor from a scholarly source found on the
TCC LRC website.....
16Works Cited Necessary Information
- Works Cited entries vary depending upon the type
of source, but they follow a general pattern - AuthorLast Name, First Name. (Smith, John.)
- Titleeither In Quotation Marks or Underlined.
- Publication Information where/how the source was
published - City of Publication Publisher (New York Random
House) - Database Name, Company publishing database
(Opposing Viewpoints, Gale Group) - Magazine/Journal name--underlined (Newsweek)
(Journal of Emergency Nurses) - Main websites name -underlined (UCLA History
Department) (NIH) - Date of publication when the source was
published or accessed (23 July 2006) or 2004.
17Works Cited Special Circumstances
- UNKNOWN AUTHOR
- When the author of a work is unknown, begin with
the work's title. - Titles of articles and other short works, such as
brief documents from Web sites, are put in
quotation marks. - Your works cited entry would look like this
- The Rich and the Rest. Futurist 39 4
(July/Aug. 2005) 38-43. SIRS Knowledge Source.
SIRS, Inc. Tidewater Community Coll. Lib.,
Portsmouth, VA. 22 Jul. 2006 lthttp//sksl4.sirs.co
mgt. - Titles of books and other whole/long works, such
as entire Web sites, are underlined. - Your works cited entry would look like this
- Atlas of the World. New York Macmillan
Publishing, 2005. - From http//www.dianahacker.com/resdoc/p04_c08_o.
html
18(No Transcript)
19(No Transcript)