When you're finding books for your research, make note of the author name(s), book title, publication date, and publisher.
For each type of source in this guide, both the general form and a specific example will be provided.
The following format will be used:
In-text Citation (Paraphrase) - entry that appears in the body of your paper when you express the ideas of a researcher or author using your own words.
In-text Citation (Direct Quotation) - entry that appears in the body of your paper, word for word from a source, and in quotation marks
References - entry that appears at the end of your paper.
Information on citing and several of the examples were drawn from Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association.
Numbers in parentheses refer to specific pages in the manual.
Follow this format when the work you are using has two authors. If there are two editors instead of two authors, use the names of the editors where the authors' names would be, followed by "(Eds.)" without the quotation marks (see the Example).
General Format
In-Text Citation (Paraphrase):
(Author Surname & Author Surname, Year)
In-Text Citation (Direct Quote):
(Author Surname & Author Surname, Year, page number)
References:
Author Surname, First Initial. Second Initial., & Author Surname, First Initial. Second Initial.
(Year). Book title: Subtitle. Publisher.
Example
In-Text Citation (Paraphrase):
(Donovan & Gerrard, 2006)
In-Text Citation (Direct Quote):
(Donovan & Gerrard, 2006, p. 476)
References:
Donovan, S., & Gerrard, A. (Eds.). (2006). A walk through Wordsworth's meadows. Foster & Sons.
The Online Writing Lab at Purdue University offers an online resource which can be used in some cases. However, it does not include everything required for citing sources in one place.
The APA citation style does not cover Canadian government sources, and has only a limited section on American government resources.
Please refer to the staff at the Library Reference Desk for clarification when citing Canadian government sources.