(WWA) In-Text Citations & The Works Cited Page Lesson

In-Text Citations & The Works Cited Page Lesson

In-text citations are references to works used in the paper. In-text citations should be used whenever a work is paraphrased, summarized, or quoted directly. Basically, anything that does not come from your own brain should be cited. Generally, an in-text citation contains the author's last name and the page number where the information was found. However, there are some other methods of citing sources, depending on the type of information used and the number of authors.

Take a look at the presentation below to learn more about how to cite sources using the in-text citation method.

The Works Cited Page

The works cited page contains a detailed list of the sources used throughout the paper. Any source that is used, whether it is paraphrased, summarized, or quoted, should appear in the works cited list.

Unlike a bibliography, a works cited list is a documentation of works actually used in the paper, rather than a list of any works consulted. Therefore, any entries on the works cited list should have an in-text citation within the paper itself. Take a look at the illustration below to learn more about formatting the works cited page in MLA format.

Sample Works Cited Page Illustration

Highlighted points of interest as formatting reminders:
--Last Name & Page Number should be displayed in a header.
--Use a 12 point font (Times New Roman used in illustration)
--Use one inch margins for top, bottom, left and right margins
--Use double-spacing
--List citations in alphabetical order
--Use a hanging indent style for citations, leaving only the 1st line of the citation flush with the left margin.

 

[CC BY 4.0] UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED | IMAGES: LICENSED AND USED ACCORDING TO TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION