Vancouver Short New
Vancouver Short New
Vancouver Short New
4 How to reference
4.3 Examples of citations no direct quotation . 8 . 4.4 Examples of citations direct quotation ................................... 8
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5. Example of an endnote .
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to give credit to other authors whose work you have quoted, or to whose work you have referred, in order to avoid a charge of plagiarism (see section 3 below); to allow the reader of your work to find the books, journal articles, web pages etc which you have read and thereby access further information on the subject; and
2 When to reference
You must provide a reference
every time you quote directly from the work of someone else; every time you refer indirectly to the work of someone else, eg if you o o o paraphrase (put into your own words) what they have said; summarise their arguments or ideas; or refer to information, including statistical data, case studies etc, which you have obtained from their work; or
where you wish to provide sources of further information, clarification of points you have made in your text, or additional evidence to support your arguments.
Plagiarism occurs when you use other peoples work without acknowledging that you have done so by citing your sources and providing references for them.
Quoting
Quotation is taking the exact words written by someone else and reproducing them in your work.
Short quotations should be contained within your paragraph of text but enclosed within quotation marks (double inverted commas).
Longer quotations should be indented as a separate paragraph and do not require quotation marks. Examples of how to insert quotations in your text are at section 4.4 below.
Paraphrasing
Even if ideas, theories, opinions etc that you have taken from other peoples work are reproduced in your work in your own words this will still constitute plagiarism unless you provide a reference.
Only information which is considered common knowledge in your field of study does not have to be referenced.
Element
Description
Citation
Inserted into your text where you have quoted from, or referred to, someone elses work.
However, if you quote from, or refer to, the same item (book, journal article etc) on more than one occasion you will use the same citation number each time in your text.
If you have quoted directly from an item more than once in your text you will place a page reference after the number.
At the end of your work giving the full reference details of works from which you have quoted or to which you have referred in your text.
The list is arranged numerically by the citation numbers in your text and should
If you have quoted directly from an item in your text, but you have only quoted from the item once, then the endnote will include a page reference.
Bibliography
Lists the full reference details for all items included in your endnote plus anything else which you have read but not referred to or quoted in your text, eg background reading.
The bibliography is arranged alphabetically by author. If it contains more than one work by the same author they are arranged alphabetically by title.
However, if you refer to the same work more than once you should use the same number each time.
A page reference can be included with the citation number but only if you have referred to the work more than once in your work. Where you have referred to an item only once the page reference is included in the entry for that item in your Endnote. See the separate section 4.5 below regarding page references.
Where the author(s) or editor(s) names do not occur naturally in your text:
Brown (1) has stated most astutely that referencing is a pain I could do without.
or
One view is that referencing is a pain I could do without (1). Longer quotations
David Lloyd George and Winston Churchill were the two most important figures in twentieth-century British politics. Not only were both renowned
wartime Prime Ministers, but they both also established impressive track records in terms of domestic reform (1).
If you have not quoted someone elses words directly, you do not need to provide a page reference in your endnote or your citation. If you have quoted directly in your text, but only once, from an item then the full reference given in your endnote should include a reference to the exact page(s) from which you have quoted, eg: (1) Diamond J. The world of fashion. 4th ed. New York (NY): Fairchild; 2002. p. 30.
However, if you have quoted from the same book more than once in your text the page reference is instead included in the citation in your text, eg:
Otherwise you would have to include the item more than once in your endnote in order to take account of the different pages from which you have quoted. Bibliography Books
Journal articles
The reference in the bibliography will include the page reference for the entire article, eg:
Kuuskraa V. Undeveloped US oil resources: a big target for enhanced oil recovery. World Oil. 2006; 227(8): 65-69.
Chandler, in a letter quoted by Hiney (1), claimed that most people could do without literature far more easily than they could do without coffee or whisky.
You only reference the work which you have read. In this case the reference which would appear in your endnote would be:
4.7 Illustrations
Illustrations referred to but NOT reproduced in your work
You may refer in your text to a graph, table, map, photograph etc which is included in a book or journal article. In this case your sentence should make clear the type of item you are referring to and the entry in your endnote should include a page reference and figure number, table number etc if there is one.
For example:
... Donnans graph (1) shows that the majority of patients ...
The book, journal article etc in which you have seen the illustration is then referenced in the normal manner. The author of the book, journal article etc may or may not be the same person who has authored the illustration. For example:
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(1) Donnan PT. Quantitative analysis (descriptive). In: Cormack D. The research process in nursing. 4th ed. Oxford: Blackwell Science; 2000. p. 371.
Detailed instructions for the referencing of illustrations which you have copied and reproduced in your work are included in the full list of Vancouver reference templates which can be accessed via CampusMoodle by clicking on Library > Referencing > RGU Vancouver: examples of references..
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Publisher
first
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Page reference
Part/issue number
Year of publication
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Author/editor/publisher. Very often there will be no identifiable person to use as an author or editor, so both the author and the publisher will be the organisation which owns the web site. This will often be a company, university etc. City of publication. A city of publication is sometimes difficult to find, so try
something like the contact us link and look for a postal address which will include a city.
Year of publication. The year of publication can also be tricky. If there is no obvious date, use the last updated year if the site gives one (usually near the bottom of the page). If this is not given, use the current year. Last updated date. Some web sites provide this, usually near the bottom of the page. If it is not there just leave it out of your reference.
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NB. Line spaces have been inserted between references in the following list. This is for the clarity of the example, and spaces are not required in your work. If in doubt, consult your school.
References
(1) Gelfgat M, Basovich V, Adelman A. Aluminium alloy tubulars for the oil and gas industry. World Oil. 2006; 227(7).
(2) University of Florida. College of Medicine. Patient care at the College of Medicine. [homepage on the Internet]. Gainesville (FL): University of Florida; 2007 [updated 2008 Mar 14; cited 2008 Jul 16]. Available from: http://www.med.ufl.edu/patients/index.shtml.
(3) Tashiro Y, Furubayashi M, Morijiri T, Suzuki K, Yasuno K, Matsuno S et al. Escherichia coli robots that freeze, smell, swell and time-keep. IET Synthetic Biology. 2007; 1(1-2). (4) Christiansen K. Going for baroque: bringing 17th-century masters to the Met. Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin. 2005; 62(3). p. 55. (5) Palmer KT, Cox RAF, Brown I, editors. Fitness for work: the medical aspects. 4th ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2007. p. 50.
(6) Doukakis I, Proctor T, Proctor S. Creativity and advertising. In: Bennett R, editor. New challenges for corporate and marketing communications. Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Corporate and Marketing Communications; 2003 Apr 7-8; London, UK. London: London Metropolitan University; 2003.
(7) Grushkin P. The art of rock; posters from Presley to punk. New York (NY): Artabras; 1991.
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(9) Brewster F, Fenton H, Morris M. Shock! Horror!: astounding artwork from the video nasty era. Guildford: FAB; 2005. p. 54.
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Stangos N, editor. Concepts of modern art. revised ed. London: Thames and
Hudson; 1981.
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Golding J. Cubism. In: Stangos N, editor. Concepts of modern art. revised ed.
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Mulvey S. Chernobyls continuing hazards. [homepage on the Internet]. London: BBC 2006 [updated 2006 Apr 25; cited 2008 Jul 16]. Available from:
News;
http://news/bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4942828.stm.
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Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain. Medicines, ethics & practice: a guide
for pharmacists & pharmacy technicians. 30th ed. London: Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain; 2006.
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Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Corporate and Marketing Communications; 2003 Apr 7-8; London, UK. London: London Metropolitan University; 2003.
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Edwards T, George W, Kuffner A, Jones D, Joy T, Dudley T et al., editors. The poetry
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In addition to professional genres, academic writing research has also examined the genres/tasks students are expected to perform in university content classrooms (1). In one of the first studies on student writing tasks, Horowitz (2) analyzed 54 writing assignments from one graduate and 28 undergraduate courses taught in 17 departments of an American university. Horowitz identified seven categories of writing tasks expected of students:
summary of/reaction to a reading; annotated bibliography; report on a specified participatory experience; connection of theory and data; case study; synthesis of multiple sources; and research project. While Horowitzs study did not have a particular disciplinary focus, other studies examined written genres required of students in specific disciplines (3). One finding is that much of what students need to write, particularly in upper division undergraduate and graduate level courses, is specifically tied to their disciplines. Faigley and Hansens study (4) of writing in a psychology course and a sociology course showed different reactions to student writing from readers with different degrees of disciplinary expertise and different aims for writing. While an English professor was largely concerned with the surface features of papers, the sociology professor paid more attention to what knowledge the student had acquired than in how well the report was written (5 p. 147).
Reference list
(1) Horowitz D. What professors actually require: academic tasks for the ESL classroom. TESOL Quarterly. 1986; 20(3).
(2) Braine G. Writing in science and technology: an analysis of assignments from ten undergraduate courses. English for Specific Purposes. 1989; 8(6). p. 56.
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(3) Swales J. Genre analysis: English in academic and research settings. New York (NY): Cambridge University Press; 1990.
(4) Berkenkotter C, Huckin T. Genre knowledge in disciplinary communication. Hillside (NJ): Lawrence Erlbaum Associates; 1995.
(5) Faigley L, Hansen K. Learning to write in the social sciences. College Composition and Communication. 1985; 36(2).
Bibliography
Allwardt DE. Teaching note writing with wikis: a cautionary tale of technology in the classroom. Journal of Social Work Education. 2011; 47(3): 597-605.
Beer DF. Writing and speaking in the technology professions: a practical guide. New York (NY): IEEE Press; 1992.
Berkenkotter C, Huckin T. Genre knowledge in disciplinary communication. Hillside (NJ): Lawrence Erlbaum Associates; 1995.
Braine G. Writing in science and technology: an analysis of assignments from ten undergraduate courses. English for Specific Purposes. 1989; 8(6): 3-16.
Faigley L, Hansen K. Learning to write in the social sciences. College Composition and Communication. 1985; 36(2): 140-149.
Gibson K. Rhetorics and technologies: new directions in writing and communication. 2011; 54(2): 213-214.
Horowitz D. What professors actually require: academic tasks for the ESL classroom. TESOL Quarterly. 1986; 20(3): 445-462.
Kirkman J. Good style: writing for science and technology. London: Spon; 1992.
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Swales J. Genre analysis: English in academic and research settings. New York (NY): Cambridge University Press; 1990.
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