How do I cite my sources?

Answered By: Conrad Pegues
Last Updated: May 11, 2022     Views: 87

Check out our Citation Research Guide for info on different styles and how to cite your sources! Find your style guide in the reference section of the library (APA, MLA, Chicago, AP). Many styles also have online resources.

The Writing Center is a great resource to review citations, plagiarism, paraphrasing, and other aspects of your paper.


You may also consider a citation management software. Zotero is a free, open-source citation management system that you can download on Mac, Windows, or Linus.

  • Help you keep track of all your citations
  • Generate a bibliography for you
  • Include many citation styles, including the most common ones as well as others 
  • More accurate than many web based citation machines, although you will always want to double check all your citations. 

Let the library know if you want to discuss other citation management options or need help!


Why do I need to cite?

Ideas matter. In our culture, we often see ideas as belonging to the person who came up with them, and these people deserve credit when you use their ideas.

Other reasons to cite:

  • Give credit to the original creator
  • Demonstrate your own credibility, critical thinking, and analysis
  • Show where you found your evidence
  • Allow your reader to see, use, and interpret that evidence for themselves
  • Show that your work is part of broader conversation

 

What is a citation?

A citation is the small chunk of text that shows where you found your information. It is formatted based on something called a citation style. Some styles use parenthetical or in-text citations and some use footnotes or endnotes. Just about every style includes a long list of all of your citations at the end, sometimes called a Bibliography, Works Cited Page, or Reference Page.

 

Why are there different styles? Which one do I use?

Human beings don't always agree. Different academic disciplines created some style rules that worked for them, but these rules didn't work for everyone, so other groups of people decided to create their own style.

Always always ask your professor which style you should use! Most professors prefer one of the common citation styles (MLA, APA, Chicago/Turabian, AP), but there are hundreds of styles so you will want to verify. If your professor tells you they don't care, it doesn't matter which style you pick as long as you are consistent and use the same style throughout your paper.

 

What do I cite?

Do cite these things:

  • Direct quotations, kept in quotation marks
  • Anything you paraphrased. Make sure you are putting everything in your own words.
  • Images, graphs, charts, film clips, or other media that you did not create
  • Anything that came from another source
  • Anything that you created for a previous class, assignment, or publication

You do not need to cite:

  • Common knowledge, such as "the sun is hot" or "UTM is a college in West TN"
  • Your own new ideas

The Writing Center is an EXCELLENT resource to discuss direct quotations, paraphrasing, and common knowledge.

 

I need help!

You are not alone. Citations can be overwhelming for a lot of students, but don't worry! The Writing Center and the library are here to help. We can talk more with you about why citations are important, how to figure out which style to use, how to use the style manuals, and how to cite specific books, articles, movies, and more. The library can help you find and check out your citation style manual, and the Writing Center can help you look over your full Works Cited list and make sure everything looks as it should.


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