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Referencing & Citation: Home

This guide explains what is referencing, citation, how to cite and how to avoid plagiarism

Dos and Don'ts

Cite:

Whether you are quoting, paraphrasing, copying and pasting, or just referencing, you do need to cite:

  • Anyone else's articulated ideas, arguments, opinions, or experiences.
  • Any artwork, pictures, videos, or other creative works produced by others.
  • Direct quotations of any words written or spoken by others.
  • Unique phrases or terms coined by others.
  • Data, statistics, or facts produced or documented by others.
  • Published research details and results, whether conducted by you or others.
  • And much more!

Don't:

Listed below are a few items you generally don't need to cite no matter which citation style you use. 

  • Your own personal information or experiences.
  • Your own arguments or opinions.
  • Your own videos, photographs, and other artwork you've created.
  • "Common knowledge"- This one is a little tricky to distinguish.  Here is a general rule of thumb: if the majority of people in your classroom already know the information, then you may not need to cite it.  For example, you may not need to cite the fact that Barack Obama is the past President of the United States.  It's best to think of common knowledge as only the most obvious facts.
  • Generally accepted phrases or terms- this usually applies only to discipline- and audience-specific situations. 

If you're uncertain when not to cite something, check with your instructor, ask a librarian, or seek the answer in the appropriate style manual.

Must Cite:

You must cite:

  • Facts, figures, ideas, or other information that is not common knowledge
  • Ideas, words, theories, or exact language that another person used in other publications
  • Publications that must be cited include:  books, book chapters, articles, web pages, theses, etc.
  • Another person's exact words should be quoted and cited to show proper credit

When in doubt, be safe and cite your source!