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  • 1.  Style Guides for Student Papers

    Posted 01-16-2001 14:41
    Hi everyone,

    Colorado Technical University is in the process of revisiting the writing
    style guidelines that we utilize for our business students. We were
    interested in finding out what other business schools require (e.g., APA,
    MLA, Chicago Style, Turabian, etc.) for papers as well as for dissertations.
    Either post your responses to Mg-Ed-Dv or send them directly to me. I plan
    to post a summary of the replies for interested others to Mg-Ed-Dv.

    Thanks in advance for your insights,
    Eric Goodman
    Colorado Technical University, Colorado Springs
    EGoodman@COS.Coloradotech.edu
    http://www.coloradotech.edu/main/index.html

    **************
    Note: from Charles Wankel, mg-ed-dv list editor
    Dr. Goodman's generous service to the Academy of Management as the
    webmaster of the ODC Division is appreciatively noted.
    http://www.aom.pace.edu/odc/


  • 2.  Style Guides for Student Papers

    Posted 01-16-2001 18:06
    From: Fred Nickols [mailto:nickols@att.net]

    I had occasion to look at the APA guidelines recently. A doctoral
    candidate is citing my web article (Change Management 101: A Primer) and
    wanted to know the proper citation form. The APA guidelines I found handle
    articles originally published elsewhere and obtained from the web but they
    don't seem to handle articles that make their first appearance on the
    web. Do you know of any guidelines for that kind of citation?

    Fred Nickols
    The Distance Consulting Company
    "Assistance at A Distance"
    http://home.att.net/~nickols/distance.htm
    nickols@att.net
    (609) 490-0095


  • 3.  Style Guides for Student Papers

    Posted 01-16-2001 18:28
    Fred,

    My recent Master's thesis contained web reference and the form that was
    accepted was:

    Sherover-Marcuse, E. (1988) A Working Definition of Racism. [On-line],
    Available http://www.unlearningracism.org/writings.htm

    Wadsworth, Y. (1998) What is Participatory Action Research? Action
    Research International, Paper 2. [On-line], Available
    http://www.scu.edu.au/schools/sawd/ari/ari-wadsworth.html.

    best regards

    alice

    *****************************************************************
    * Alice Macpherson, TQ,ID,MA phone: (604) 599-2426 vm 9954 *
    * Kwantlen University College email: alicemac@kwantlen.bc.ca *
    * 12666-72nd Ave, Surrey, BC, Canada, V3W 2M8 *
    * "Life Long Learning includes Everyone, All the Time" *
    *****************************************************************


  • 4.  Style Guides for Student Papers

    Posted 01-16-2001 21:35
    From: Cecile G. Betit [mailto:cgbetit@sover.net]

    http://webster.commnet.edu/mla.htm
    Citation Online
    Using MLA Style to Cite and Document Sources
    This chapter's guidelines for citing Internet sources are based on two
    sources: the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers (1999) by Joseph
    Gibaldi. The MLA Handbook advises that you acknowledge sources "by keying
    brief parenthetical citations in your text to an alphabetical list of works
    that appears at the end of the paper" (114). Widely used by writers in
    literature, language studies, and other fields in the humanities, the MLA
    style of documentation allows writers to keep texts "as readable and as free
    of disruptions as possible" (115).

    The MLA Handbook provides information about the purposes of research;
    suggestions for choosing topics; recommendations for using libraries;
    guidance for composing outlines, drafts, notes, and bibliographies; and
    advice on spelling, punctuation, abbreviations, and other stylistic matters.
    It also presents a style for documenting sources and gives directions for
    citing print sources in the text and preparing a list of Works Cited.
    Thorough acquaintance with the MLA Handbook will, as its author promises,
    "help you become a writer whose work deserves serious consideration" (xiii).
    This chapter follows the conventions of MLA citation style.

    The MLA Handbook gives guidelines for making in-text references to print
    sources. The following section shows how you can apply the same principles
    to citing online sources in your text.

    1. Link an in-text citation of an Internet source to a corresponding entry
    in the Works Cited.


    According to the MLA Handbook, each text reference to an outside source must
    point clearly to a specific entry in the list of Works Cited. The essential
    elements of an in-text citation are the author's name (or the document's
    title, if no author is identified) and a page reference or other information
    showing where in a source cited material appears.

    Create an in-text reference to an Internet source by using a signal phrase,
    a parenthetical citation, or both a previewing sentence and a parenthetical
    citation.


    Box 5.1
    Using italics and underlining in MLA style

    The MLA Handbook provides the following advice for the use of italics and
    underlining in word-processed texts intended for print-only publication:

    Many word-processing programs and computer printers permit the reproduction
    of italic type. In material that will be graded or edited for publication,
    however, the type style of every letter and punctuation mark must be easily
    recognizable. Italic type is sometimes not distinctive enough for this
    purpose, and you can avoid ambiguity by using underlining when you intend
    italics. If you wish to use italics rather than underlining, check your
    instructor's or editor's preferences. (65)

    However, when composing in HTML, don't substitute underlining for italics,
    because underlining in HTML indicates that the underlined text is an active
    hypertext link. (All HTML editing programs automatically underline any text
    linked to another hypertext or Web site.)

    When composing Web documents, use italics for titles, for emphasis, and for
    words, letters, and numbers referred to as such. When you write with
    programs such as email that don't allow italics, type an underscore mark
    _like this_ before and after text you would otherwise italicize or
    underline.


    Using a signal phrase To introduce cited material consisting of a short
    quotation, paraphrase, or summary, use either a signal phrase set off by a
    comma or a signal verb with a that clause, as in the following examples.
    (See 4e for a discussion of signal phrases and verbs.)





    Here are the Works Cited entries for these two sources:

    Landsburg, Steven E. "Who Shall Inherit the Earth?" Slate 1 May 1997. 1
    Oct. 1999 < http://www.slate.com/Economics/97-05-01/ Economics.asp>.
    Mitchell, Jason P. Letter. "PMLA Letter." 10 May 1997. 1 Nov. 1999
    <http://sunset.backbone.olemiss.edu/~jmitchel/pmla.htm>.
    Using a parenthetical citation To identify the source of a quotation,
    paraphrase, or summary, place the author's last name in parentheses after
    the cited material.


    "Parents know in advance, and with near certainty, that they will be
    addicted to their children" (Landsburg).

    In response to Victor Brombert's 1990 MLA presidential address on the
    "politics of critical language," one correspondent suggests that "some
    literary scholars envy the scientists their wonderful jargon with its
    certainty and precision and thus wish to emulate it by creating formidably
    technical-sounding words of their own" (Mitchell).
    Here are the Works Cited entries for these sources:


    Landsburg, Steven E. "Who Shall Inherit the Earth?" Slate 1 May 1997. 1
    Oct. 1999 <http://www.slate.com/Economics/97-05-01/ Economics.asp>.

    Mitchell, Jason P. Letter. "PMLA Letter." 10 May 1997. 1 Nov. 1999
    <http://sunset.backbone.olemiss.edu/~jmitchel/pmla.htm>.
    Using a previewing sentence and a parenthetical citation To introduce and
    identify the source of a long quotation (one comprising more than four lines
    in your essay or research paper), use a previewing sentence that ends in a
    colon. By briefly announcing the content of an extended quotation, a
    previewing sentence tells readers what to look for in the quotation. Indent
    the block quotation ten spaces (or two paragraph indents) from the left
    margin. At the end of the block quotation, cite the source in parentheses
    after the final punctuation mark.



    That the heroic and historically important deeds of previously unknown
    women should be included in history books is evident from the following
    notice:


    Event: April 26, 1777, Sybil Ludington.
    On the night of April 26, 1777, Sybil Ludington, age 16, rode through towns
    in New York and Connecticut to warn that the Redcoats were coming [. . .] to
    Danbury, CT. All very Paul Reverish, except Sybil completed HER ride, and
    SHE thus gathered enough volunteers to help beat back the British the next
    day. Her ride was twice the distance of Revere's. No poet immortalized (and
    faked) her accomplishments, but at least her hometown was renamed after her.
    However, recently the National Rifle Association established a Sybil
    Ludington women's "freedom" award for meritorious service in furthering the
    purposes of the NRA as well as use of firearms in competition or in actual
    life-threatening situations although Sybil never fired a gun. (Stuber)


    Here is the Works Cited entry:


    Stuber, Irene. "April 26, 1996: Episode 638." Women of Achievement and
    Herstory: A Frequently-Appearing Newsletter. 3 May 1996. 11 Dec. 1997
    <http://www.academic.marist.edu/woa/ index.htm>.
    2. Substitute Internet text divisions for page numbers.


    The examples in 5a-1 assume that an Internet source has no internal
    divisions (pages, parts, chapters, headings, sections, subsections). The MLA
    Handbook, however, requires that you identify the location of any cited
    information as precisely as possible in parentheses. Because Internet
    sources are rarely marked with page numbers, you will not always be able to
    show exactly where cited material comes from. If a source has internal
    divisions, use these instead of page numbers in your citation. Be sure to
    use divisions inherent in the document and not those provided by your
    browsing software.

    A text reference to a source with divisions may appear in the text along
    with the author's name or be placed in parentheses after a quotation,
    paraphrase, or summary.


    As TyAnna Herrington notes in her Introduction, "Nicholas Negroponte's
    Being Digital provides another welcome not only into an age of technological
    ubiquity, but into a way of 'being' with technology."

    "Negroponte's uncomplicated, personal tone fools the reader into a sense
    that his theses are simplistic" (Herrington "Introduction").
    Here is the Works Cited entry:


    Herrington, TyAnna K. "Being Is Believing." Rev. of Being Digital, by
    Nicholas Negroponte. Kairos: A Journal for Teaching Writing in Webbed
    Environments 1.1 (1996) at "Reviews." 24 May 1996
    <http://english.ttu.edu/kairos/1.1>.

    3. Use source-reflective statements to show where cited material ends.


    The MLA practice of parenthetical page-number citation lets you indicate
    precisely where information from a printed source ends. Many Internet
    sources, however, appear as single screens, and MLA style does not require
    parenthetical page citations for one-page works. By analogy, a single-screen
    document cited in text needs no page citation. To let your readers know
    where your use of an Internet source with no text divisions ends, use a
    source-reflective statement.

    Source-reflective statements give you an opportunity to assert your
    authorial voice. Writers use source-reflective statements to provide
    editorial comment, clarification, qualification, amplification, dissent,
    agreement, and so on. In the following example, the absence of a
    source-reflective statement creates uncertainty as to where use of an
    Internet source ends.


    According to TyAnna Herrington, Nicholas Negroponte has the ability to make
    complex technological issues understandably simple. For those who are not
    techno-philes, this is a blessing; it allows them to apprehend the real
    significance of digital technology without feeling that such ideas are too
    difficult to consider.
    In the next example, the writer has added a source-reflective statement to
    show that use of the source has ended.





    Here is the Works Cited entry:


    Herrington, TyAnna K. "Being Is Believing." Rev. of Being Digital, by
    Nicholas Negroponte. Kairos: A Journal for Teaching Writing in Webbed
    Environments 1.1 (1996) at "Reviews." 24 May 1996
    <http://english.ttu.edu/kairos/1.1>.


    For updates to MLA citation style, consult the MLA's Web site
    <http://www.mla.org>


    When using MLA style, place a list of cited sources, arranged
    alphabetically, after the text of your essay and any explanatory notes. The
    MLA Handbook recommends that you "draft the [Works Cited] section in
    advance, so that you will know what information to give in parenthetical
    references as you write" (106). Doing this makes in-text citation of sources
    easier by giving you an idea of what in-text reference options will work
    best for each citation.
    Referring to print sources, the MLA Handbook gives the following general
    models for Works Cited entries:






    Box 5.2
    Using hypertext to document sources on the Web

    The hypertext environment of the World Wide Web doesn�t just alter the way
    you do research, it also lets you document sources in a new way�by using
    hypertext links. Electronic journals published on the Web are already
    replacing traditional notes, Works Cited listings, appendixes, and other
    supporting text with links to the documents being cited. To read more about
    hypertext documentation, see Chapter 10 of this book. For an example of how
    it works, look at the format of Andrew Harnack and Eugene Kleppinger,
    "Beyond the MLA Handbook: Documenting Electronic Sources on the Internet" in
    Kairos: A Journal for Teaching Writing in Webbed Environments 1.2 (1996) at
    <http://english.ttu.edu/kairos/1.2/ inbox/mla.html> or any essay published
    in Kairos at <http://english.ttu. edu/kairos>.


    The MLA Handbook also presents numerous variations that accommodate a
    variety of print sources (e.g., a multivolume work, an editorial). For
    detailed information on creating a Works Cited list, see Chapter 4 of the
    MLA Handbook, "Documentation: Preparing the List of Works Cited."

    For writers creating in-text citations and Works Cited lists for online
    sources, the MLA Handbook provides the following general recommendations:

    Download or print any online material you plan to use, in case it becomes
    inaccessible online later.

    Don't introduce a hyphen at the break of a URL between two lines.

    If you must divide a URL between two lines, break it only after a slash.1


    Section 4.9 of the MLA Handbook includes models for numerous types of online
    sources (e.g., an online book, an advertisement, a multidisc publication).
    The following models for Works Cited entries, based on the recommendations
    of the MLA Handbook, cover the types of sources most often cited by student
    and professional writers.

    1. World Wide Web site



    When you document sources from the World Wide Web, the MLA suggests that
    your Works Cited entries contain as many items from the following list as
    are relevant and available:


    Name of the author, editor, compiler, or translator (if available and
    relevant), alphabetized by last name and followed by any appropriate
    abbreviations, such as ed.

    Title of a poem, short story, article, or other short work within a
    scholarly project, database, or periodical, in quotation marks

    Title of a book, in italics or underlined

    Name of the editor, compiler, or translator of a book (if applicable and if
    not cited earlier), preceded by any appropriate abbreviation, such as ed.

    Publication information for any print version

    Title of the scholarly project, database, periodical, or professional or
    personal site (in italics or underlined), or, for a professional or personal
    site with no title, a description such as home page2

    Name of the editor of a scholarly project or database (if known)

    Version number (if not part of the title) or, for a journal, the volume,
    issue, or other identifying number

    Date of electronic publication or posting or latest update, whichever is
    most recent (if known)

    Name of any institution or organization sponsoring or associated with the
    Web site

    Date you accessed the source

    URL (in angle brackets)
    Although no single entry will contain all fourteen items of information, all
    Works Cited entries for Web sources contain the following basic information:

    Online document


    Author's name (last name first). Document title. Date of Internet
    publication. Date of access <URL>.


    Box 5.3
    Formatting Works Cited Entries in HTML

    Some HTML editors don�t let you easily indent the second line of a Works
    Cited entry. In such instances, bullet the first line of an entry.

    Landsburg, Steven E. "Who Shall Inherit the Earth?" Slate 1 May 1997. 1 Oct.
    1999 <http://www.slate.com/Economics/97-05-01/ Economics.asp>.
    Mitchell, Jason P. Letter. "PMLA Letter." 10 May 1997. 1 Nov. 1999
    <http://sunset.backbone.olemiss.edu/~jmitchel/pmla.htm>.





    To see how to document specific types of Web sources, refer to the examples
    throughout this section.

    Personal site


    Pellegrino, Joseph. Home page. 16 Dec. 1998. 1 Oct. 1999
    < http://www.english.eku.edu /pellegrino/personal.htm>.
    Professional site


    Mortimer, Gail. The William Faulkner Society Home Page. 16 Sept. 1999.
    William Faulkner Soc. 1 Oct. 1999 <http://www.utep.edu/
    mortimer/faulkner/mainfaulkner.htm>.


    NAIC Online. 29 Sept. 1999. National Association of Inventors Corporation.
    1 Oct. 1999 <http://www.better-investing.org/>.


    U. S. Department of Education (ED) Home Page. 29 Sept. 1999. US Dept. of
    Education. 1 Oct. 1999 <http://www.ed.gov/index.html>.


    William Faulkner on the Web 7 July 1999. NU of Mississippi. 20 Sept. 1999
    <http://www.mcsr.olemiss.edu/~egjbp/faulkner/ faulkner.html>.
    Book

    An online book may be the electronic text of part or all of a printed book,
    or a book-length document available only on the Internet (e.g., a work of
    hyperfiction).

    Bird, Isabella L. A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains. New York, 1881.
    Victorian Women Writers Project. Ed. Perry Willett. 27 May 1999. Indiana U.
    4 Oct. 1999 < http://www.indiana.edu/~letrs/vwwp/ bird/rocky.html>.


    Bryant, Peter J. "The Age of Mammals." Biodiversity and Conservation. 28
    Aug. 1999. 4 Oct. 1999 <http://darwin.bio.uci.edu/
    ~sustain/bio65/lec02/b65lec02.htm>.


    Harnack, Andrew, and Eugene Kleppinger. Preface. Online! A Reference Guide
    to Using Internet Sources. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2000. 5 Jan. 2000.
    <http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/ online>.
    Article in an electronic journal (ejournal)


    Joyce, Michael. "On the Birthday of the Stranger (in Memory of John
    Hawkes)." Evergreen Review 5 Mar. 1999. 12 May 1999
    <http://www.evergreenreview.com/102/evexcite/joyce/nojoyce.html>.


    Wysocki, Anne Frances. "Monitoring Order: Visual Desire, the Organization
    of Web Pages, and Teach the Rules of Design." Kairos: A Journal for Teachers
    of Writing in Webbed Environments 3.2 (1998). 21 Oct. 1999
    <http://www.english.ttu.edu/kairos/3.2/features/ wysocki/bridge.html>.
    Article in an electronic magazine (ezine)


    Adler, Jerry. "Ghost of Everest." Newsweek 17 May 1999. 19 May 1999
    <http://newsweek.com/nw-srv/issue/20_99a/printed/int/socu/ so0120_1.htm>.
    Newspaper article


    Wren, Christopher. "A Body on Mt. Everest, a Mystery Half-Solved." New York
    Times on the Web 5 May 1999. 13 May 1999
    <http://search.nytimes.com/search/daily/bin/fastweb?getdoc+site+
    site+87604+0+wAAA+%22a%7Ebody%7Eon%7Emt.%7Eeverest%22>.
    Review


    1. Michael Parfit, review of The Climb: Tragic Ambitions on Everest, by
    Anatoli Boukreev and G. Weston DeWalt, New York Times on the Web 7 Dec.
    1997, 4 Oct. 1999 <http://search. nytimes.com/
    books/97/12/07/reviews/971207.07parfitt.html>.
    Editorial


    "Public Should Try Revised Student Achievement Test." Editorial. Lexington
    Herald-Leader 13 Apr. 1999. 4 Oct. 1999
    <http://www.kentuckyconnect.com/heraldleader/news/041399/
    editorialdocs/413test-1.htm>.
    Letter to the editor


    Gray, Jeremy. Letter. Lexington Herald-Leader. 7 May 1999. 7 May 1999
    <http://www.kentuckyconnect.com/heraldleader/news/
    050799/lettersdocs/507letters.htm>.
    Government publication


    Bush, George. "Principles of Ethical Conduct for Government Officers and
    Employees." Executive Order 12674 of April 12, 1989 (as modified by E. O.
    12731). Part 1. 26 Aug. 1997. 18 Nov. 1997
    <http://www.usoge.gov/exorders/eo12674.html>.

    Scholarly project or information database


    Center for Reformation and Renaissance Studies. Ed. Laura E. Hunt and
    William Barek. May 1998. U of Toronto. 11 May 1999
    <http://CITD.SCAR.UTORONTO.CA/crrs/index.html>.


    The Internet Movie Database. May 1999. Internet Movie Database Ltd. 11 May
    1999 <http://us.imdb.com>.
    Short text within a larger project or database


    Whitman, Walt. "Beat! Beat! Drums!" Project Bartleby Archive. Ed. Steven
    Van Leeuwen. May 1998. Columbia U. 11 May 1999
    <http://www.bartleby.com/142/112.html>.

    Other Web sources

    When documenting other Web sources�for example, an audio or film clip, a
    map, or a painting�provide a descriptive phrase (e.g., map) if needed.

    di Bondone, Giotto. The Morning of Christ. WebMuseum, Paris. 22 Oct. 1995.
    1 June 1999 <http://metalab.unc.edu/wm/paint/auth/
    giotto/mourning-christ/mourning-christ.jpg>.


    "Methuen, Massachusetts." Map. U.S. Gazeteer. US Census Bureau. 4 Oct. 1999
    <http://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/gazetteer>.
    2. Email message

    To document an email message, provide the following information:

    Author's name
    Subject line, in quotation marks
    Description of message that includes recipient (e.g., e-mail to the author)3
    Date of sending

    Kleppinger, Eugene. "How to Cite Information from the Web." E-mail to
    Andrew Harnack. 10 Jan. 1999.
    3. Web discussion forum posting


    To document a posting to a Web discussion forum, provide the following
    information:

    Author's name
    Title of posting, in quotation marks
    Phrase online posting
    Date of posting
    Name of forum
    Date of access
    URL, in angle brackets


    Colleen. "Climbing Questions." Online posting. 20 Mar. 1999. Climbing
    Forum. 27 May 1999 <http://www2.gorp.com/forums/
    Index.cfm?CFApp=55&Message_ID=18596>.

    Marcy, Bob. "Think They'll Find Any Evidence of Mallory & Irvine?" Online
    posting. 30 Apr. 1999. Mt. Everest >99 Forum. 28 May 1999
    < http://everest.mountainzone.com/99/forum>.
    4. Listserv message


    To document a listserv message, provide the following information:

    Author's name
    Subject line, in quotation marks
    Phrase online posting
    Date of posting
    Name of listserv
    Date of access
    Address of listserv, in angle brackets


    Holland, Norman. "Re: Colorless Green Ideas." Online posting. 30 May 1999.
    Psyart. 1 June 1999 <http://web.clas.ufl.edu/ipsa/ psyart.htm>.


    Parente, Victor. "On Expectations of Class Participation." Online posting
    27 May 1996. 29 May 1996 < philosed@sued.syr.edu>.
    5. Newsgroup message


    To document information posted in a newsgroup discussion, provide the
    following information:

    Author's name
    Subject line, in quotation marks
    Phrase online posting
    date of posting
    Date of access
    Name of newsgroup with prefix news:, in angle brackets

    Kaipiainen, Petri. "Re: Did Everest see Everest?" Online posting. 4 May
    1999. 2 June 1999 <news:rec.climbing>.
    If, after following all the suggestions in 4c-3, you cannot determine the
    author's name, then use the author's email address, enclosed in angle
    brackets, as the main entry. When deciding where in your Works Cited to
    insert such a source, treat the first letter of the email address as though
    it were capitalized.


    <lrm583@aol.com> "Thinking of Adoption." 26 May 1996. 29 May 1996
    <alt.adoption>.
    6. Real-time communication


    To document a real-time communication, such as those posted in MOOs, MUDs,
    and IRCs, provide the following information:

    Name of speaker(s) (if known)
    Description of event
    Date of event
    Forum (e.g., Diversity University)
    Date of access
    URL or other Internet address, in angle brackets

    Fox, Rita. ENG 301 Class MOO: Concept mapping for Web project. 2 Feb. 1999.
    Diversity University. 3 Feb. 1999 <http://moo.du.org:8000>.

    Sowers, Henry, Miram Fields, and Jane Gurney. Online collaborative
    conference. 29 May 1999. LinguaMOO. 29 May 1999
    <telnet://lingua.utdallas.edu:8888>.
    7. Telnet, FTP, and gopher sites


    Telnet site

    The most common use of telnet is for participation in real-time
    communication (see 5b-6). Although the use of telnet for document retrieval
    has declined dramatically with increased Web access to texts, numerous
    archived documents are available only by telnet. To document a telnet site
    or a file available via telnet, provide the following information:

    Name of author or agency
    Title of document
    Date of publication
    Date of access
    Telnet address, in angle brackets, with directions for accessing document

    Environmental Protection Agency. "About the Clean Air Act (CAA) Database."
    2 June 1999 <telnet://fedworld.gov>.


    FTP site

    To document a file available for downloading via file transfer protocol,
    provide the following information:

    Name of author or file
    Title of document
    Size of document (if relevant), in brackets
    Any print publication information, italicized or underlined where
    appropriate
    Date of online publication, if available
    Date of access
    Complete FTP address, in angle brackets

    "everest2.gif" [535K]. 4 Apr. 1993. 3 June 1999 <ftp://ftp.ntua.gr/
    pub/images/views/sorted.by.type/Mountains/everest2.gif>.


    Mathews, J. Preface. Numerical Methods for Mathematics, Science, and
    Engineering. 2nd ed. N.p.: Prentice Hall, 1992. 8 June 1999
    <ftp://ftp.ntua.gr/pub/netlib/textbook/index.html>.
    Gopher site

    The gopher search protocol brings text files from all over the world to your
    computer. Popular in the early 1990s, especially at universities, gopher was
    a step toward the World Wide Web's hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP).
    Although the advent of HTML documents and their retrieval on the Web has
    diminished the use of gopher, many documents can still be accessed through
    Web browsers.

    To document information obtained by using the gopher search protocol,
    provide the following information:

    Author's name
    Title of document
    Any print publication information, italicized or underlined where
    appropriate
    Date of online publication
    Date of access
    Gopher address, in angle brackets, with directions for accessing document

    Goody, Jack. "History and Anthropology: Convergence and Divergence."
    Bulletin of the Institute of Ethnology, 75.2 (1993). 2 June 1999
    <gopher://gopher.sinica.edu.tw/00/ioe/engbull/75b.txt>.

    Work Cited

    Gibaldi, Joseph. MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers.
    New York: Mod. Lang. Assn., 1999.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    ----
    1This instruction differs from the one in Online! (1d-2). We suggest that,
    for papers written in MLA style, you follow the MLA's recommendations.
    (Return to text.)

    2Home page is spelling that MLA currently recommends. (Return to text.)

    3E-mail is the spelling that the MLA currently recommends. (Return to text.)


    Copyright � 1998 by Bedford / St. Martin's


  • 5.  Style Guides for Student Papers

    Posted 01-17-2001 09:29
    There is also an APA web page that I send my students to at:
    http://www.english.uiuc.edu/cws/wworkshop/bibliography/apa/apamenu.htm
    that may be of help...

    Tara

    Tara Grey Coste, Ph.D.
    Leadership & Organizational Studies
    Lewiston-Auburn College
    University of Southern Maine
    51 Westminster St.
    Lewiston, ME 04240
    tcoste@usm.maine.edu (e-mail)
    207/753-6500 (phone)
    207/753-6555 (fax)


  • 6.  Style Guides for Student Papers

    Posted 02-02-2001 04:51
    Baker and Nova SouthEastern use APA, which I prefer UoP sometimes uses APA,
    depending upon the program Upper Iowa U uses MLA.

    Using Procite or Endnote it doesn't matter. Just auto reformat to the
    required format of the receiver.

    Conna
    gandolf@cyberverse.com

    -------------
    mg-ed-dv editor's note:
    APA style information available at:
    http://www.psychwww.com/resource/apacrib.htm

    MLA style guide information at:
    http://www.newark.ohio-state.edu/~osuwrite/mla.htm
    http://webster.commnet.edu/mla.htm
    http://library.concordia.ca/faqs/mlanetscape.html

    Procite:
    http://www.isiresearchsoft.com/pc/PChome.html

    Endnote:
    http://www.endnote.com/

    Nota Bene:
    http://www.notabene.com/