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Harvard Referencing BU
Referencing Guide
5
English
Undergraduate 1
10/11/2013

Additional English Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term

Article in a print journal


Author's Surname, INITIALS., Year of publication. Title of article. Title of journal, Volume number and (part number), Page numbers of contribution. 

Kennedy, R.R., 2009. The power of in-class debates. Active learning in higher education, 10 (3), 225-236. 

If there are multiple authors, list all in the reference list at the end of your work e.g. Kennedy, R.R. and Smith, T., 2010.

Definition
e.g. Kennedy (2009) suggests… blah blah

e.g. According to Kennedy's interpretation of research conducted by Bonwell and Eison in 1991, "Students learn more effectively by actively analyzing, discussing and applying content in meaningful ways, rather than by passively absorbing information" (Kennedy 2009, p.225).
Term

Article in a Print Journal


Author's Surname, INITIALS., Year of publication. Title of article. Title of journal, Volume number and (part number), Page numbers of contribution. 

Kennedy, R.R., 2009. The power of in-class debates. Active learning in higher education, 10 (3), 225-236. 

If there are multiple authors, you must list all in the reference list at the end of your work e.g. Kennedy, R.R. and Smith, T., 2010.

Definition
e.g. Kennedy (2009) suggests… 

e.g. According to Kennedy's interpretation of research conducted by Bonwell and Eison in 1991, "Students learn more effectively by actively analyzing, discussing and applying content in meaningful ways, rather than by passively absorbing information" (Kennedy 2009, p.225).
Term

Contribution in Edited Print Book


Contributing author's Surname, INITIALS., Year of publication. Title of contribution. Followed by In : Surname, INITIALS., of author or editor of publication followed by ed. or eds. if appropriate. (Year of publication, if different to contribution). Title of book. Edition (if not the first edition) Place of publication: Publisher, Page number(s) of contribution. 

Briassoulis, H., 2004. Crete: endowed by nature, privileged by geography, threatened by tourism? In: Bramwell, B., ed. Coastal mass tourism: diversification and sustainable development in Southern Europe.Clevedon: Channel View, 48-67.

If there is more than one contributing author who wrote the chapter, you must list all authors in the reference list at the end of your work e.g. Smith, A., Jones, T. and Bloggs, J., 2010…

Definition

 If you refer to a contributor in an edited source, you cite just the contributor, not the editor: 

e.g. Crete is the largest Greek island and the fifth largest island in the Mediterranean (Briassoulis 2004).

e.g. According to Briassoulis, in Crete since the 1960s, "tourism has become a leading economic sector" (2004, p.48).
 

If there is more than one contributing author who wrote the chapter, cite the authors according to guidance given in the three quick guides titled print book with one, two and three or more authors (or see section 2.1.1., points v and vi, page 4 of the BU Guide to Citation and Referencing in the Harvard Style).

 

e.g. (Smith et al. 2010).

Term

Print Book with 1 Author


 

1.    Author’s Surname, INITIALS., Year of publication. Title. Edition (if not the first edition). Place of publication: Publisher. 

Woods, P., 1999. Successful writing for qualitative researchers. London: Routledge. 

In this example, you need to look on the back of the title page to find the date.
If the book is edited, for example if Peter Woods had edited this book, then the reference would read Woods, P., ed. 1999...

The use of 'ed.' or 'eds.' (for more than one) is used to represent the word 'editor'.

Definition
e.g. In a popular study Woods (1999) argued that we have to teach good practices...
e.g. As Woods (1999, p.21) said, "good practices must be taught" and so we...
e.g. Theory rises out of practice, and once validated, returns to direct or explain the practice (Woods 1999).
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