178x Filetype PPT File size 0.43 MB Source: uwf.edu
Attribution Parenthetical documentation appears in the text of the document and usually includes the author, publication date, and page number of the source. The full bibliographical entry for the source contains additional publication and location information and must appear on the References Page. The References Page The References page follows the last page of the main text. It includes all sources that are cited and can be referenced or recovered by a reader. Because personal communications cannot be recovered, do not include them in the reference list. Format of the References Page • Center “References” at the top of the page and begin entries on the following line; • Reference entries are listed alphabetically according to author. To alphabetize the list automatically, select the References list, and click the Sort button ( ) in the Home tab; • If there are two or more works by the same author, then list by year of publication; • If two or more works by the same author have the same publication year, then list these references by title. Alignment The first line of each entry is positioned flush with the left margin. Any subsequent lines of each entry are indented (This format is known as a hanging indent). You can easily create a hanging indent by selecting the entry, finding the Paragraph dialogue box in the Home tab, clicking on the dialogue launcher button ( ), locating the Indentation section, and choosing the Hanging option in the Special drop- down box. Sample References Page 1/2” 1” Dyslexia 17 Centered References Continue Header with page number 1” 1” Henry, M.K. (1998). Structured, sequential, multisensory teaching: The orton legacy. Annals of Dyslexia, 48, 3-26. Molfese, V.J., Molfese, D.L., and Modgline, A.A. (2000). Newborn and preschool predictors of Hanging Indent second-grade reading scores: An evaluation of categorical and continuous scores. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 43, 545-54.
no reviews yet
Please Login to review.