Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
When you quote directly or summarize from a source, you are required to cite your source(s). List all of your sources in alphabetical order. Place the list at the conclusion of your paper.
Book with a Single Author or Editor Voelkel, James R. Johannes Kepler and the New Astronomy. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999. Book with more than one author or editor Yolen, Jane, and Bruce Coville. Armageddon Summer. New York: Harcourt Brace & Company, 1998. Your citation for a book should include these important elements: Author(s) or editor(s). Title of the book. Place of publication: Publisher, Date of publication. Electronic Book Adams, Douglas. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998. <http://www.netlibrary.com>. January 1, 2002. Your citation for an electronic book should include these important elements: Author or editor. Title of the book. Place of publication: Publisher, Date of publication. <Address of the site>. Date you accessed it. Short Story Connell, Richard. "The Most Dangerous Game." Short Stories: Characters In Conflict. Ed. John E. Warriner. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. Orlando. 1981. 1. Your citation for a short story should include these important elements: Author "Title" of the short story Title of the anthology Editor of the anthology Publisher and city Page on which the story begins
Chart or Map
Stars and Constellations. Chart. M. Ruskin. 1997
Your citation for e-mail should include these important elements: Name of chart or map. Format. Publisher. Location. Year.
E-Mail
Horowitz, Anthony. "Re: Sakura Medal" to Martin Swist, 8 June 2007 Your citation for e-mail should include these important elements: Author's last name, first name "Subject of the e-mail" Recipient's name Date e-mail was sent Encyclopedias and other multi-volume works Lehman, Jeffrey. "French Americans: Bad advice given in good French." Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America: Primary Documents. 2nd. ed. Vol.2, p 591.1999. Your citation for an article from an encyclopedia should include these important elements: Author (if given) "Title of article" Title of the encyclopedia Volume number, Page number. Date of publication.
Videos
Finding Nemo. Dir. John Lasseter. Walt Disney Pictures, 2003. Web Pages A Document on the World Wide Web
Writer's Handbook: MLA Documentation. University of Wisconsin-Madison. February 29, 2000. April 1, 2002. <http://www.wisc.edu/writing/Handbook/DocMLAWorksCited.html#book> Your citation for a web page should include these important elements: Author, if given Title of work Group responsible for the site, if given. Date site was last updated Date of access. | URL of the site.
Bibliography rubric
10 points
ALL entries are complete, in the correct form and order, horizontal; citations are listed in alphabetical order.
8
MOST entries are complete, in the correct form and order; citations are listed mostly in alphabetical order.
Information is nearly complete, but A FEW entries in the wrong order (e.g. list instead information in of vertical citation), and not in form and order alpha order. may be in alpha
The Works Cited above was modeled on the Guide to Library Research at Duke University <http://www.lib.duke.edu/libguide/citing.htm> . The term "Works Cited" refers to the citation guide developed Association (MLA).
General notes:
give the authors' names in the fullest possible form (Cross, Roberta Louise instead of Cross, R. L.), if there are several places of publication, use the first city mentioned, if you can't find the place of publication, ask for assistance if you can't find a date of publication, write n.d., or ask for assistance if a list of copyright dates are given, use the most recent one, for the United States: a well-known city may be used alone (like New York City), but for lesser-known cities, write the state as well (you may abbreviate the state -- Olympia, Wash.). For other countries, write the city and the country (Nagoya, Japan),
if you can't find an author or editor: look on the official title page, look on the reverse (verso) side of the title page, skip the author and put down the rest of the information.