FIVE PAGES DOUBLE SPACED (minimum)
HAVE A "WORKS CITED" PAGE AT THE END.
FOLLOW THE MLA FORMAT
INCLUDE AT LEAST ONE LONG QUOTE that is indented and single spaced.
THE DETAILS OF MLA FORMAT CAN EASILY BE FOUND ON-LINE (just google MLA), but here are a few pointers about the Works Cited page:
Writing The Works Cited Page
Your works cited page is an essential part of the process. The works cited page is the last page of your paper and it tells the reader where he or she may find the sources cited within your paper. It is essential you use the correct form. Remember a few thing when organizing the works cited page:
- The works cited page must be labeled Works Cited Page. The label should be at the top center of the page.
- The sources on the page must be listed IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER BY THE AUTHORS LAST NAME.
- The first line of each entry is place all the way to the left margin, all lines after the first line which are part of the same entry must be indented five spaces.
- Entries in the works cited page should be single spaced. Double space in between entries.
Books and Reference Books
One Author
Frye, Northrup. Anatomy of Criticism: Four Essays.
Two or Three Authors
Gesell, Arnold, and Frances L. Wilson. Child Development: An Introduction to the Study of
Human Growth.
Four or More Authors
Spiller, Robert, et al. Literary History of the
Macmillan, 1960.
No Author Named
Encyclopedia of Photography.
A Work With More Than One Volume
Smith, Page. A New Age Now Begins. 2 vols.
A Work With An Editor
Swisher, Cleary, ed. The Spread of Islam.
Two Or More Books By The Same Person
Boroff, Marie. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.
---. Wallace Stevens: A Collection of Critical Essays.
Prentice Hall, 1963.
Newspapers, Magazines, Journals, and Other Sources
A journal or magazine whose page numbers continue to the next issue (continuous pagination)
Deluch, Max. "Mind from Matter." American Scholar July 1978: 339-53.
A journal whose pages start anew with each issue
Barthe, Frederick, and Joseph Murphy. "Alcoholism in Fiction."
August 1981: 30-37.
A weekly, biweekly, or monthly magazine
Miller, Tyler. "The Vietnam War: The Executioner." Newsweek
An article in a newspaper
Strout, Richard L. "Another Bicentennial." Christian Science Monitor
An anonymous article
"Drunkproofing Automobiles." Time
An article from a reference book
"Mandarin." Encyclopedia
A signed article from a reference book
Coble, Parks M., Jr. "Chiang Kai Shek." Encyclopedia of Asian History.
Ed. Ainslee T. Embree. Vol. 1.
A government publication
United States Dept. of Labor. Bureau of Statistics. "Dictionary of Occupational
Titles." 4th ed.
A radio or television program
"The First American." Narr. Hugh Downs. Writ. and prod. Craig Fisher.
NBC News Special. KNBC,
Electronic Sources
Periodical information on CD-ROM
A source from NEWSBANK
McCullough, Peggy. "Juvenile Drug Use Prompts Test Push." (
The Commercial Appeal.
fiche 3, grid G2.
A source from NY Times Ondisc
Angier, Natalie. "Chemists Learn Why Vegetables Are Good for You."
New York Times
CD-ROM. UMI-Proquest Oct. 1993.
A source from Information Access
Shearson Lehman Brothers, Inc. "Reebok: Company Report."
General Business File. CD-ROM. Information Access. Dec. 1993.
A Source from InfoTrac
Anderson, George M. "Organizing Against the Death Penalty."
InfoTrac: Student Edition. CD-ROM. Gale Group. Nov. 2000
A Source from SIRS
Paliokas, Kathleen. "Trying Uniforms on for Size." American School Board Journal
May 1996: 33-35. School. Vol. 2. Art. 46. SIRS Researcher. CD-ROM.
SIRS. Inc., 1999
Other Electronic Sources
E-mail
Danford, Tom. "Monday Greetings." E-mail to Terry Craig.
Newsgroup Posting
Shaumann, Thomas Michael. "Re: Technical German."
Online posting. Newsgroup comp.edu.languages.natural.natural.
Material accessed through a computer service
Guidelines for Family Television Viewing.
on Elementary and Early Childhood Educ., 1990.
ERIC. Online. BRS.
"Foreign Weather: European Cities." Accu-Data. Online. Dow Jones
News Retrieval.
Web site - Article in an Online Newspaper, Magazine or Newswire
"Endangered Species Act Upheld." AP Online.
Note: the first date in an online entry, if it is available, is the "date published" and the second date is the date accessed. If there is only one date listed it is assumed it is the date accessed.
Web site - Information directly from a home page
The Hemlock Society.
Web site - Information on a section of a site with a link from the home page
Miller, David. "Abolition of Slavery."
"NYCLU Opposes Internet Censorship in the Schools." NYCLU,
Liberties
1 comment:
How did u find my blog?
Why do u have a blog giving instructions for MLA format?
If the students don't pay attention in class, what makes u think they'll pay attention to it online..
I know! Add lots of pretty pictures and they'll read it. Hahaha
Thanks for commenting on my blog!!!! :D
Did u like it?
-Ruben-
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