"Plagiarism is defined as the use of close imitation of the language and thoughts of another without attribution, in order to represent them as one’s own original work."
(Growing Success, Assessment, Evaluation and Reporting in Ontario Schools, Grade 1- 12, 2010, p. 151)
Chicago Citation Style QuickGuide: Notes-Bibliography System 18th Ed. (UAlberta.ca)
The notes and bibliography style is popular in the humanities—including literature, history, and the arts.
The author-date style is more common in the physical, natural, and social sciences.
APA Reference Examples / APA 7 Examples (Handout)
APA 7 Tutorial & Student Sample Paper APA 7th
OWL Purdue Online Writing Lab /
OWL Purdue: Research and Citation
There is a cite or citation button ( " ) which will generate a citation for the article you want to quote or paraphrase.
Choose which style you require, copy and paste, then check the formatting matches your paper.
REMEMBER: When using citation generators, you are responsible for consistent formatting:
Alphabetical order by author's last name
Consistent type of font & size (12 point)
Indenting & double-spaced
Appropriate use of italics and/or underlining
Remove any highlighting
Place the cursor at the beginning of your text, highlighting the entry or entries.
Go to the “Format” drop-down menu.
Select “Align & indent.”
Select “Indentation options.”
In the “Special indent” field, select “Hanging.”
How to use MLA 9th Ed. for an academic journal source.
MLA 8th Ed. - Formatting Your Paper
APA 7th Ed. citation format using an example for academic journals.
APA Formatting Tips: Basics of APA
Create Chicago-style footnotes in Google Docs
How to Set Up a Title Page in Chicago Style
Create citations in Google Docs: Tools & Citation
Two ways to create hanging indents in Google Docs
How to Integrate Quotations in MLA Format
Create page breaks in Google Docs
The author of the pamphlet. This can be an individual, group, or organization
Title of the pamphlet
URL of the website that the pamphlet was found on (if found online)
Date the pamphlet was published
Publisher of the pamphlet
City where the publisher is located (for Chicago/Turabian)
Last name, First name of the author or Organization responsible for the creation of the pamphlet. Title of the Pamphlet. Publisher*, date of publication, URL (remove http:// or https://). Pamphlet.
*Note about the Publisher: If the name of the publisher matches the name of the author, start the citation with the title and include this information in the publisher field instead.
If in Print:
If the pamphlet is found in print, exclude the URL.
Here’s how the above example would be cited in MLA format:
Access. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, fall 2017, metmuseum.org/-/media/Files/Events/Programs/Progs%20for%20Visitors%20with%20Disabilities/AccessCalendar.pdf. Pamphlet.
*The Metropolitan Museum of Art is both the author and the publisher. To prevent duplication of this information twice in the citation, The Metropolitan Museum of Art is only included in the publisher container.
In-text citations
The information included in a parenthetical citation should match the first item in the full reference on your Works Cited page. For a pamphlet, this would be either the author’s last name, the organization who created the pamphlet, or the title of the pamphlet. If the organization name or title is long, it can be shortened to the first noun clause for the parenthetical citation. You should also include a page number if there is one available.
Here’s how the above example would be cited in an in-text citation:
(Access 6)
Source: EasyBib: How to Cite a Pamphlet
RHSA Library MLA Presentation: