2. What is referencing….? Referencing is about acknowledging all the sources of information you have used to prepare an assignment If you use another person’s words or ideas without acknowledging them it is called plagiarism
3. Why reference? To provide evidence to support points you have made To show you have understood relevant texts To refer others to your sources To enable your tutor to check the accuracy of your work To review your sources for revision or further information
4. What do I need to reference? Any quotes taken from the work of another person If you quote, use quotation marks “…” and citation either before or after the quotation. If you paraphrase, you don’t need quotation marks. Cite in the flow of your text. Any ideas taken from the work of another person Images are as subject to copyright as books and journals. Your citation should be next to the image you use. Any images you refer to or copy into your work
5. Citation? Reference? Bibliography? Citing (or the citation):acknowledging within your text the document from which you have obtained your information. Reference:the detailed description of the document from which you have obtained your information. Bibliography: the list of references that goes at the end of your assignment
6. One last thing, “Harvard” referencing? At South Thames College we use the Harvard style of referencing. A lot of colleges and universities use it too – however, its possible you might come across different styles as you continue your studies, but the general principles are the same. If you want to know more about Harvard referencing, have a look at this wikipedia article