Creating a Works Cited Page - Mulvane School District USD 263
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Transcript Creating a Works Cited Page - Mulvane School District USD 263
Creating a
Works Cited Page
Using Sources
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Table of Contents
MLA Format
General Rules for Works Cited Pages
General Rules for Works Cited Entries
General Rules for Web Sources
Works Cited Entry: Book
Works Cited Entry: Periodical
Works Cited Entry: Web Site
Additional Research Sources/Information
Next Step: Using Quotations
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My instructor says I need
to use MLA format when
creating a Works Cited
page.
What is that?
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MLA Format
MLA stands for Modern Language
Association.
MLA format, developed by the Modern
Language Association, provides the style
most instructors in the humanities require
for papers.
There are other formats that can be used,
such as APA (American Psychological
Association) or the Chicago Manual of
Style. Each format has its own set of
rules.
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General Rules for
Works Cited Pages
in MLA Format
Double space everything on a Works
Cited page.
Center the title Works Cited (no bold,
italics, or underlining) and place it at
the top of the page.
Use a “hanging indent” after the first
line of each entry.
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OK: so what does it look like?
Centered
Title
“Hanging”
Indent
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Everything is
double-spaced,
and there are
no line spaces
between
entries. 6
General Rules for
Works Cited Entries
The author is usually first in a Works Cited
entry, followed by the source’s title(s) and
publication information.
Place the titles of smaller works (articles,
short stories, book chapters, poems, songs)
in quotation marks.
Italicize the titles of larger works (books,
journals, magazines, newspapers, and films).
Capitalize the first letter of each word in titles
(except articles, short prepositions, or
conjunctions).
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More Rules for
a Works Cited Page
Include publication medium (Print or Web)
in each citation.
All Web sources need two dates: the date
that the Web page was last updated and
the date the information was accessed
from the Internet.
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Works Cited Entry
for a Book
In-text Citation
Wow! Look at
the connection!
The ideal context for identity
formation is “a supportive and
respectful family” (Levine 169).
Works Cited Entry
Works Cited
Levine, Madeleine, Ph.D. See No Evil: A Guide to Protecting Our Children
from Media Violence. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1998. Print.
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Works Cited Entry
for a Periodical
In-text Citation
A graphic example is the series of school shootings that have occurred in recent
years—the most recent occurred on March 21, 2005, at Red Lake High School on
an Indian reservation in Minnesota, where a seventeen-year-old male, who had just
killed his grandparents, shot and killed five students, a teacher and a security guard,
wounded many others and then turned the gun on himself (Wilgoren A-1).
Works Cited Entry
Works Cited
Wilgoren, Jodi. “Shooting Rampage by Student Leaves 10 Dead on
Reservation.” New York Times 22 Mar. 2005, sec. 1: A-1+. Print.
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Works Cited Entry for a Web Site
In-text Citation
Columbia University Professor Jeffrey Johnson spent seventeen years
recording the viewing habits of children in 707 families in Upstate New
York and found that the ones “who watched one to three hours of television
each day . . . were 60% more likely to be involved in assaults and fights as
those who watched less TV” (“Research”).
Works Cited Entry
Works Cited
“Research on the Effects of Media Violence.” Media Awareness Network.
2005. Web. 12 Mar. 2005
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Hmm… what if I am
using something else as
a research source?
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Additional Research Sources
Lecture or Speech
Chapter in a Book
CD-ROM
Email
Interview
Television or Film
Advertisement
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For More Information
Visit the Purdue Online Writing Lab
for more information about formatting
various Works Cited entries in MLA
format.
(http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/print/
research/r_mla.html)
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Quick Check
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
What does MLA stand for?
What is used after the first line of every
entry?
Which words are NOT capitalized in
titles?
What two dates are needed for Web
sources?
Where should you go if you have MLA
questions?
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Quick Check Answers
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Modern Language Association
A hanging indent
Articles, short prepositions, and
conjunctions
The date the source was updated and the
date the information was accessed
Purdue On-line Writing Lab
(http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/
print/ research/r_mla.html)
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Today…
Find and print a credible source for your group’s
research project if you haven’t already done so.
Meet with your group to decide what articles and
sidebar/”pullout information” you plan to include
in your brochure/newsletter.
Assign one article/sidebar for each group
member.
Highlight information you plan to use in your
article.
As a group, create a graphic organizer for your
newsletter.
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Now I need to learn how to
use the information from my
sources in my paper.
How can I use quotations
and avoid plagiarism?
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