This document provides a guide on plagiarism, citation basics, and the MLA citation style. It defines plagiarism as presenting others' ideas as your own without giving them credit. Exceptions for common facts are outlined. Proper citation is important to show respect for others' work, establish credibility, and avoid plagiarism. The MLA style for in-text citations and bibliographic references is explained, including citations for one author, two authors, editor, periodical, internet, and book sources. Students are advised to cite sources to prevent plagiarism and warned about using Wikipedia as a source.
3. PLAGIARISM?
To plagiarize means “to commit literary
theft.”
“To present as new and original an idea or
product derived from an existing source.”
You must give credit to the “owner” of
the information that you use in your
paper, otherwise you are STEALING!
4. PLAGIARISM…Exceptions!
Certain well-known facts do not need
to be cited.
◦ Ex: Walt Disney founded the Disney
company and created one of the most
well-known cartoon characters of all time,
Mickey Mouse. (NOT PLAGIARISM)
◦ Ex: Raised on a farm near Marceline,
Missouri, Walt became interested in
drawing at an early age, selling his first
sketches to neighbors when he was only
seven years old. (PLAGIARISM—IF NOT
CITED)
5. Why cite?
Proper citation is a key element in academic scholarship and
intellectual exchange. When we cite we:
show respect for the work of others
help a reader to distinguish our work from the work of others
who have contributed to our work
give the reader the opportunity to check the validity of our use
of other people’s work
give the reader the opportunity to follow up our references,
out of interest
show and receive proper credit for our research process
demonstrate that we are able to use reliable sources and
critically assess them to support our work
establish the credibility and authority of our knowledge and
ideas
demonstrate that we are able to draw our own conclusions
share the blame (if we get it wrong).
6. WHEN DO I NEED TO CITE?
Whenever you borrow words or ideas:
whenever you use quotes
whenever you paraphrase
whenever you use an idea that someone
else has already expressed
whenever you make specific reference to
the work of another
whenever someone else's work has been
critical in developing your own ideas.
7. In order to prevent plagiarism, we must
cite sources we use..
• Ideally, no more than 25 percent of
your paper should be direct quotations..
• Paraphrase as much as you can..
• Use direct quotations when citing a
statistic or original theory..
• Use author's words if they capture a
point exactly..
YOU SHOULD KNOW ……
8. MLA Citation Style
In-text or Parenthetical Citations
Bibliographical references/ Cited works/
References (The first word of your citation
match the corresponding entry on your Works
Cited page!)
9. In-Text or Parenthetical Citations
…a system in which you give your source
in parentheses immediately after you
give the information.
10. MLA In-Text Citation – Author & Page No.
(Keeling 125)
Notice there is no “p”
and no comma.
The struggle for identity
is common during
puberty (Keeling 125).
11. In-Text Citations – Title & Page No.
Her distinctive writing style adds to her
mystique (“Plath” 19).
Often, articles, editorials, pamphlets, and
other materials have no author listed; thus,
give the first distinctive word of the title
followed by page #
*You add the full title only if it is short. If it is a
long title, you only use the first one or two
words.
12. In-Text Citations – Page No. Only
• If you have already mentioned the
author’s name, put a page number only:
Keeling states that struggle for identity is common during
puberty (125).
13. In-Text Citation – Organization as Author
Often, an organization serves as the
author:
The National Council for Teachers of English
state that students bring insider knowledge
of youth culture and a passion for and
investment in its texts and practices (5).
OR
Students bring insider knowledge of youth
culture (“National Council” 5).
14. Other forms of In-Text
Citations
1. Two authors:
(Johnson and Rodriguez 221)
2. Three or more authors:
(Johnson et al. 75) “et al.” means “and others”
3. A work with no page numbers (like a webpage):
(Johnson)
15. Bibliographical References
A Book with One Author
For example:
(sample)
Last, First. Book Title. City: Publisher, Year.
(example)
Gilligan, Carol. In a Different Voice.
Cambridge: Harvard Press, 1982.
Underline or italic
16. A Book with Two+ Authors
You just need to add the second author’s name,
but this time the second author goes First
Name first, Last Name Last.
For example:
(sample)
Last, First and First Last. Book Title. City:
Publisher, Year.
(example)
Embry, Carol and Joseph Addison. The lives of the
Eighteenth Century Satirists. London: Penguin,
1796.
*Notice that when a citation does not fit on one line, the next line starts 5 spaces in
from the first line.
17. A Book with an Editor (or two!)
For example:
(sample)
Last, First, ed. Book Title. City: Publisher, Year.
(example)
Bloom, Harold, ed. Shakespeare’s Baudy. Stratford-
upon-Avon: Globe Press, 1996.
18. An Article from an journal/magazine/newspaper
For example:
(sample)
Last, First. “Article Title.” Name of …. Volume: Issue
Number Date of publication: page numbers. Name of
database. Vendor. Date Visited<site address of
database>.
(example-Online)
Khan, John. “The Chinese Theatre.” Journal of
Drama Studies June 2003: 145-68. Proquest.
Gale Learning. 2 May 2011 <www.aclibrary.org>.
19. An Internet Site
For example:
(sample)
Last, First. “Title of page.” Title of home page. Date
written or posted (day month, year). Date visited <site
address of title page>.
(example)
Smith, Mary. “Science in America.” United States
Science. 3 May 2010. Access on 12 Nov
2015<http://spaceflight.usa.gov/spacenews.html>.
21. • Which of the following examples is a correctly
formatted citation for a one author book, where
the quoted material comes from page 75?
(Jones, 75) (Jones, p.75)
(Jones page 75)(Jones 75)
A
C
B
D
22. Correct!
(Jones 75)
In text citations for one author books only
contain the author’s last name and the page
number. You should not put a comma, “p.” or
“page.”
23. Which of the following examples is a correctly
formatted citation for a two author book, where
the quoted material starts on page 84 and ends
on page 86?
(Garica and Lo, 84-86) (Garica and Lo 84-86)
(Garica & Lo 84 to 86)(Garica & Lo 84-86)
D
B
C
A
24. Correct!
In text citations for two author books contain the
authors’ last names separated by “and”, and the page
number. When there is a range of pages, you put the
starting page, a dash, and then the ending page.
(Garica and Lo 84-86)
25. The example below is what kind of a
bibliographic citation?
Erickson, Leif. “How I discovered America.” Journal of
Viking Studies 24 (1991): 25-42.
Periodical Book with one author
NewspaperWebpage
26. Correct!
Bibliographic citations that have “” quotation
marks, automatically should tell you that it is a
selection in another publication. Therefore,
these types of citations are either journal,
magazine, or newspaper articles (all
periodicals).
Periodical
27. In the following citation, what part of it is
incorrect?
Holland, Merlin, and Miller, John. The Big Book of Stories.
Chicago: Altamira Press, 2000.
City 2nd Author’s Name
1st Author’s NamePublisher
28. Correct!
Bibliographic citations list the first author’s
name “last name” first and “first name” last, but
all other authors are listed “first name” first and
“last name” last.
2nd Author’s Name
29. BEWARE OF CERTAIN
SITES!
You should know by now that
WIKIPEDIA and .com sites are unreliable
sources.
Watch…
See what I mean?
Stick to .edu, .org, or .gov sites, which
come from reliable educational
institutions, organizations, or the
government.
30. What you learned today
In this lesson you learned:
1. about plagiarism,
2. the importance of citation styles,
3. and how to use MLA citation style.
Good Luck building your research
paper. Use your LRC—we can
help you be Successful!
31. Cited works
“Plagiarism and Citation Basic”. Aceess on 2 Nov
2015
http://www.slideshare.net/caitlingillmett/plagiarism-
and-citation-basics
“Trinity College Library”. MLA Citation. Access on
11 Oct 2015
http://www.slideshare.net/caitlingillmett/plagiarism-
and-citation-basics