Citing Your Sources 

There are a number of different styles or formats for citations. Which style you use depends upon the subject discipline you are working in. If you are uncertain about which style to use, ask your professor. 

Each style includes the same basic parts of a citation, but may organize them slightly differently.

Note: Most article databases provide a Cite or Citation Tools option for each article that allows users to select a citation style, then copy and paste the correctly formatted citation into their paper.

 

Some Commonly Used Writing Style Guides:
apa The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (APA)
The APA style is often used by students in the social sciences.
mla MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers
The MLA (Modern Language Association) style, is often used by students in languages and English. 
Chicago Manual of Style A Manual for Writers of Term Papers, Theses, and Dissertations
This commonly-used style by Kate Turabian is a student version of a longer guide, The Chicago Manual of Style.
Scientific Style and Format, describes two systems of documentation, the citation-sequence system and the name-year system.  Also called CBE Format - Council of Biology Editors.
Research and Documentation web siteby Diana Hacker provides examples of documenting sources using MLA, APA, Chicago (Turabian), and CBE, in the Humanities, Social Sciences, History, and Sciences. Also includes links to citation style manuals covering Biology to Social Work. 
Style guides (APA, MLA, Chicago, CSE/CBE. AMA, Turabian, and Legal formats with examples are available on the Library's Web site under Citation Guides. (https://lib.westfield.ma.edu/cite
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