ANTH 1111 - Archaeology and Gender - Fowler

Citation Management Tools

Learn about EndNote, Mendeley & Zotero!

Citing What You Find

checkmark

When you "cite" a source you are showing, within the body of your text, that you took the words or ideas from another place. 

checkmark You also are providing a way for the reader (your professor) to locate the sources you relied on in your research.
checkmark Failure to acknowledge these sources can be considered plagiarism.
checkmark Remember that for whatever style you chose (in consultation with your professor), pay attention to the details and be consistent.  Incorrect citations are just as bad as no citations at all!

All citations for your assignments for Archaeology and Gender should be formatted according to the American Antiquity style guide per the syllabus:

American Antiquity Style Guide

https://www.saa.org/publications/american-antiquity

The style guides highlighted below are the most commonly used style guides you may encounter in academic writing.

Regardless of your intent, each of the following constitutes plagiarism:

 

checkmarkDirect Plagiarism -- including a verbatim quotation without a proper citation

checkmarkParaphrasing without a citation...passing off the ideas of others as your own

checkmarkThe inclusion of graphics, tables, charts or web pages without proper acknowledgement

checkmarkDouble dipping -- turning in the same paper for more than one class

See the "Citing Your Sources" Tab for more information about how to credit your sources.

Some tips to help you avoid accidental plagiarism include:

 

checkmarkStart your research early -- procrastination can lead to last minute stress & sloppy work

checkmarkKeep notes or a bibliography of the sources you consult as you go -- it is easier than reconstructing it at the end.

checkmarkVisit the Writing Studio for help on  incorporating your evidence & sources into your paper.