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Recording Sources

Recording Sources. Source Cards. Source Cards. Each time you find a book, article, interview, government document, etc you can use, prepare a source card. A source card is important for many reasons: It allows you to easily find that source again

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Recording Sources

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  1. Recording Sources Source Cards

  2. Source Cards • Each time you find a book, article, interview, government document, etc you can use, prepare a source card. • A source card is important for many reasons: • It allows you to easily find that source again • It gives you a “jump start” on your works cited page

  3. Source Cards Source Number Bibliographic Citation Place Where Source is Found 1 Bryden. M.P. “Additional Attentional Strategies in Listening.” National Review of Cognitive Psycology 33 (1999): 57-66. 19 Apr 2001 <http://www.cogpscyc.com.htbin>. EBSCO

  4. Source Number • Located in the upper-right hand corner • Always circled • Each separate source (book, article, government document, etc) gets its own number • Number is also used on your note card so you do not have to write the citation again.

  5. Place Where Source is Housed • Located in lower left-hand corner • Name of the library (LHS Library/Lebanon Public Library), the internet database (EBSCO/Academic Search Premier), etc.

  6. Bibliographic Citation • Located in center of card • Always formatted with an indention on all lines after the first • Allows you to relocate the source • Gives you a jump start on your works cited page • Necessary to avoid plagiarism

  7. Bibliographic Citations • For your research, you may only use books, magazine articles (print or electronic), or articles from scholarly journals. • Here are the exact bibliographic citations for each:

  8. Books Updike, John. Hugging the Shore. New York: Random House, 1983. Author’s last name, first name. Book Title. City of Publication: Publishing Company, Year of Publication.

  9. Print Magazine Articles Smith, Shelly. “Baseball’s Forgotten Pioneers.” Sports Illustrated. 30 March 1992: 72. Author’s last name, first name. “Article Title.” Magazine Title. Date of publication: page number.

  10. Internet Magazine Article Russell, Ian. “Family Myths and Family Realities.” Salon 12 Dec 1999. 3 Feb 2001<http://www.salonmagazine.com/mwt/feature/1999/12/23russell.html>. Author’s last name, first name. “Article Title.” Magazine Title Date of Publication. Date of Access <URL>.

  11. Article in Scholarly Journal Bryden, M.P. “Additional Attentional Strategies in Listening.” National Review of Cognitive Psycology 33 (1999): 57-66. 19 Apr 2001<http://www.cogpscyc.com>. Author’s last name, first name. “Title of Article.” Name of Scholarly Journal Volume number (Year of publication): page numbers. Date of access <URL>.

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