| Samples of some standard in-text citations:
With single author's last name in sentence:
Jones (2001) argued that there is a serious shortage of nursing students in all states across the U.S.
With single author, name not mentioned in sentence:
There is a serious shortage of nursing students across the United States (Jones, 2001).
With multiple authors for one work (for two authors, always cite both surnames plus date every time reference to their work occurs. In the parentheses use "&" (Jones & Stevens, 2000). In the text of your essay, use "and": "Jones and Stevens (2000) agree . . . ." For three to five authors, the first time the reference occurs, cite all authors surnames in the order they appeared on the title page of their work followed by date. After that first reference, cite using the first listed author's surname plus followed by "et al."
Jones, Golding, Stevens, and Smith (1990) suggested that primates are capable of using complex signs to communicate.
Primates are capable of using complex signs to communicate (Jones, Golding, Stevens & Smith, 1990).
Jones et al. (1990) continued to demonstrate that verbally prelingual human infants, likewise, can use and comprehend sign language as well.
The study results reveal that verbally prelingual infants can use sign language to communicate (Jones et al., 1990). (Note this is present tense: see tense and APA above)
With corporations or group authors:
First reference in text:
The National Institute of Health [NIH] (2000) fact sheet stated that incidents of HIV infection are continuing to increase among teenagers.
Subsequent references:
The NIH (2000) fact sheet also reported that documented cases of HIV infection overall continues to decline.
With no author listed or with anonymous author:
- For articles, use first few words of the reference list entry (usually this is the title of the work) and place them in quotation marks: ("Language Challenges," 1998).
- For Books, use first few words of the reference list entry and place them in italics: (College Financial Outlooks, 2000).
- For works listed as anonymous: (Anonymous, 1999).
Directly Quoting information:
Kitch (2001) has pointed out that "Both waste authorities and industry see biorecycling and biopolymers as part of the waste management solution" (p. 2).
Extensive Quotations: Generally it is a good idea to paraphrase or summarize information; however, if you must use a lengthy quotation (40 words or more), you should present it as a block quotation by indenting 5 spaces (one tab). No quotation marks are necessary, for the block informs readers that the information is a quote. Note also that the period in a block quotation comes before the parentheses:
Kitch (2001) has argued that bioplastics have a promising future market and reported that
Factors working to advance bioplastics and biorecycling include landfill restrictions on organics, high tipping fees for
disposal, and regulatory constraints on incineration. In Japan, no "unreduced" materials can be landfilled, and landfills will be effectively closed in Korea by 2005, New Zealand by 2010 and Germany by 2030. U.S.-style waste disposal is not economically viable elsewhere. While tipping fees are $12 to $80/ton in the U.S., they range from $125 to $300/ton in the European Union (EU), $180 to $350/ton in Southeast Asia, and $250 to $800/ton in Japan. (pp. 2-3)
Miscellaneous common concerns in citing authors:
- Citing Indirect sources (a source within a source): Use a double reference. In your sentence acknowledge the researchers who made the finding you're using as evidence; and, in your parenthesis, cite the source from which you took the secondary source by saying "cited in" plus name, date, page number. EX. Stevens and Duke (1998) found . . . . (cited in Roundtree & Mills, 1999, p. 29 - 30).
- Citing work by the same author and published in same year. Use lower case letters after the date to distinguish the two publications. Use these same lower case letters on your reference page after the date so readers can look there to distinguish the two works. EX: Jones (2000a) stated . . . . for second reference, Jones (2000b) stated . . . .
- Citing authors with the same surname. Use author's initials to distinguish them, even if their works have separate publication dates. R. L. Jones (2001) versus A. D. Jones (2000).
- Personal communications (such as emails, letters, non-archived chat groups, personal interviews, etc.) Cite in-text using communicator's surname, "persona communication," plus as exact of a date as possible. EX: (Jones, personal communication, October 12, 1998). Personal communication do not appear on reference list.
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