

Be aware that pagination (page numbers) may not be present or appropriate for many electronic publications. Not all electronic documents have an obvious author or title so you will sometimes need to use your own judgment to determine these details. Author’s surname and initials or given nameĮlectronic format (online) documents are Web site and Web pages, journal articles published on the internet or retrieved from a fulltext database and books published in electronic format.Author's surname and initials or given name (of the part).In addition to the details for the Whole Book (see above) record the following information specific to the part. Parts of books (Chapters, sections, conference papers, etc.) editor, reviser, compiler or translator, if other than the author.volume number or number of volumes, if applicable.author’s surname and initials or given name.Please note: you may not need to use all of these elements for every citation. You must keep a record of the journal title where the article was published or the book title where you found the chapter. Be careful with photocopied articles from journals or chapters from books. These lists will help you to record the information necessary to create your references. The descriptive elements for a variety of document types are listed below. You must give credit in your paper when using direct quotations, ideas, paraphrasing, specific reference to the work of another and whenever someone else's work has been critical in developing your own ideas. At the time of reading a document, record all of the descriptive elements (listed below) necessary to create a citation.
