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Citing Our Reports As Sources In Your Own... |
WE
PROVIDE ALL SCHOOL REPORT EXAMPLES
AS MODELS FOR IDEAS & SCHOLARLY RESEARCH INFORMATION
At the conclusion of any relevant report that you will write,
it is imperative that you cite The Paper Store as one of your research sources.
You will find the authors name in either the header or footer of any research sent
to you. If you do not, simply use "Paper Store Enterprises Inc."
Common methodologies for including us in your
bibliography or 'works cited page are as follows :
A.P.A. STYLE:
(American Psychological Association)
Format For Bibliography Or
"Reference" Page:
The APA Style changes slightly every year or so.
The safest way to list one of our reports in the APA Style is as follows:
lkjAuthor Name (Year). Title.
Hainesport, NJ : Paper Store, Inc.
For example, if the author of a report we wrote in
1999 was Dr. P. McCabe and the title was "Exxon-Valdez : A White Collar Crime,"
the proper way to list our report in your bibliography would be:
lkjMcCabe, Dr. P. (1999). Exxon-Valdez : A White Collar Crime.
Hainesport, NJ : Paper Store, Inc.
Format For In-Text Citations:
Let's assume that you read the following in
one of our reports by Dr. P. McCabe:
With regard to personality, Sigmund Freud defined "id" as the subconscious
area of our persona which maintains our instinctive biological needs and urges us to eat,
to sleep to urinate and so forth.
If this idea were reiterated in your own report ,
one APA-style example of how you might use it and cite it would be as follows:
McCabe (1999) notes that Freud's
"id" is essentially representative of a subconscious zone responsible for such
basic instincts as urinating, sleeping, & even eating.
Another acceptable format would be:
Freud's "id" is essentially
representative of a subconscious zone responsible for such basic instincts as urinating,
sleeping, & even eating (McCabe, 1999).
If you decide to quote our report DIRECTLY (word for word) using the APA style, you must also include the page
number from which the quote originated in our
report. Assuming the above McCabe quote came from page 6 ... a properly-cited direct quote
would look like:
McCabe (1999), writes that "With
regard to personality, Sigmund Freud defined "id" as the subconscious area of
our persona which maintains our instinctive biological needs and urges us to eat, to sleep
to urinate and so forth" (p. 6).
-or-
"With regard to personality, Sigmund Freud
defined "id" as the subconscious area of our persona which maintains our
instinctive biological needs and urges us to eat, to sleep to urinate and so forth" (McCabe, 1999; p. 6).
M.L.A STYLE:
(Modern Language Association)
Format For Works Cited Page:
The best way to list one of our reports in the MLA Style as a work
cited is as follows:
Author Name. Title Of Report.
lkj(Hainesport, NJ : The Paper Store, Inc., Year).
For example, if the author of a report we wrote in 1999 was Dr. P. McCabe and the title
was "Exxon-Valdez : A White Collar Crime," the proper way to list our report in
your Works Cited would be:
McCabe, Dr. P. Exxon - Valdez : A White Collar lkjCrime.
(Hainesport, NJ : The Paper Store, Inc, lkj1997).
Format For In-Text Citations:
Let's assume that you read the following in one
of our reports by Dr. P. McCabe:
With regard to personality, Sigmund Freud defined "id" as the
subconscious area of our persona which maintains our instinctive biological needs and
urges us to eat, to sleep to urinate and so forth.
If this idea were reiterated in your own
report, one MLA-style example of how you might use it and cite
it would be as follows:
Dr. P. McCabe notes that Freud's
"id" is essentially representative of a subconscious zone responsible for such
basic instincts as urinating, sleeping, & even eating (6).
(6 refers to the
page # in our report on which the idea is located).
Another acceptable format would be:
Freud's "id" is essentially representative of a
subconscious zone responsible for such basic instincts as urinating, sleeping, & even
eating (McCabe 6).
If you decide to quote our report DIRECTLY (word for word)
using the MLA style, you must cite as above -- but include quotation marks (" ")
around the phrase or sentences you copy directly.
For Other Styles Such as
Chicago Manual Or (Kate L.) Turabian,
Please See Your Course Books, Your Instructor, Or, --
If You've Already Gotten a Report From Us -- Send Us
An E-Mail and ASK!
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