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Referencing (Why reference? (Assists you to avoid plagiarism, Demonstrates…
Referencing
Why reference?
Assists you to avoid plagiarism
Demonstrates the depth and the breadth of your research and reading
Enables other researchers to locate your sources
Supports and strengthens your argument
https://www.murdoch.edu.au/library/help-support/support-for-students/referencing
How to
https://www.swinburne.edu.au/media/swinburneeduau/library/docs/pdfs/Harvard_brief_guide.pdf
Place of publication – state or city or suburb. Add extra information if there is more than one p
Publisher.
Edition number – only if this is not the first edition. Use the abbreviation ‘edn’.
Title of series and volume number, if applicable.
Title – plus the subtitle, if there is one. Place a colon between the title and subtitle.Both are italicized. Only the first letter of the first word and proper nouns of book titles should be capitalized.
Year of publication.
Author(s) – either a person(s) or an organization. Names are presented surname first, initial(s) next.
Books: bibliographic details required
https://www.swinburne.edu.au/media/swinburneeduau/library/docs/pdfs/Harvard_brief_guide.pdf
Articles from newspapers, magazines and journals (except those freely available): bibliographic details required
Author(s) – if given. Names are presented surname first, initial(s) next.
Year of publication.
Title of article – enclose in single quotation marks. Only the first letter of the first word and proper nouns of article titles should be capitalized.
Title of newspaper/magazine/journal. The title should be italicized. The first letter of the first word and the first letter of each major word should be capitalized.
Volume and/or issue number. Use the abbreviation/s ‘vol.’ and/or ‘no.’.
Day and month, or season – if volume and/or issue number are not provided, or if needed to precisely identify an article.
Page number(s) that the article is printed on, if they are included. Note: this is not an estimate of how many printed pages would result from printing the article, but the page numbers given in the database or on the publication itself.
https://www.swinburne.edu.au/media/swinburneeduau/library/docs/pdfs/Harvard_brief_guide.pdf
Information from the web: bibliographic details required
Author(s) or organization responsible for the webpage – if given. If there is no clearly identifiable author, do not use the name of the Copyright owner or website host/website sponsor, as they may not be the same person or organization that authored the work. If no author can be identified or determined at all, then use the title, and the title should be italicized – see the Harvard style complete guide web page for more in that instance.
Year the information was published or year of the most recent update. Use the Copyright date of a web page if there is no date of publication. If a range of Copyright dates is given (e.g. © 2015 – 2018), use the latest date indicated.
Title of the webpage/document – plus the subtitle, if there is one. Place a colon between the title and subtitle. Both are italicized. Only the first letter of the first word and proper nouns should be capitalized. The title is usually shown at or near the top of the page.
Name of the organization hosting the webpage on their website or the name of the sponsor of the webpage. With organizations like government bodies or large companies, this is sometimes the same as the author organization.
Date that you first viewed the web page, in this order: day, month, year. Precede the date with the word ‘viewed’.
URL. The URL (webpage address) should be enclosed in angle brackets: < >. The URLs should not be active/live links; please deactivate URLs before enclosing them.
Definition
https://www.murdoch.edu.au/library/help-support/support-for-students/referencing
Method of acknowledging another person's ideas which you have used in your own writing.
All sources that you use in your work: words and ideas, facts, images, videos, audio, websites, statistics, diagrams, and data.