Many students underestimate the importance of referencing but from an academic
perspective, referencing is vitally important.
The cornerstone of any
academic writing be it a term paper, essay, research project or dissertation is
the dissemination of ideas. References, i.e., source material based on the
views, opinions and research findings of others provide the conceptual framework
necessary to engage in analytical debate.
In addition to highlighting the
importance of referencing, this article also highlights the most common
referencing mistakes and where students can access the best free referencing
resources.
Imagine you had to write an academic answer to the following
question without references.
Criminal profiling is unscientific:
discuss
Impossible. However, passionate or valid your personal view on
the topic is e.g. "I disagree, I actually think criminal profiling is scientific
because..."
I'm afraid from an academic perspective an unsubstantiated
personal opinion is not worth the paper it's written on. This is why the
convention within academia is to write in the third person?
A key aspect
of referencing that students tend to overlook is the fact that they allow the
reader to identify, access and use the material themselves.
It also
crucial to reference properly so that there can no possible suggestion of
plagiarism i.e. taking and using the writings of others and passing it off as
ones own. Plagiarism is an extremely serious offence and can result in a student
been expelled if found guilty.
When you begin your school, college or
University course you should at some point (usually in the first week) be given
specific guidelines on the standard referencing style required. In most cases
this will be the APA referencing format, although many UK institutions favor the
Harvard system.
Make sure you have these guidelines to hand whenever you
do any form of academic writing. It's the best form of referencing quality
control you can have, so use the guidelines as intended.
Most Common
Referencing Mistakes
Without doubt the most common referencing format
mistakes relate to the increasing popular practice of obtaining source material
via electronic means e.g. the Internet.
Most Internet references will
have been accessed via a specific web page, however, remember there are other
Internet sources e.g. newsletters, online newspapers, e-books etc.
APA
style referencing guidelines suggest that an Internet source should provide a
document title or description, a date (either the date of publication or update
or the date of retrieval), an Internet address (URL) and Whenever possible, the
author(s) of the source material as well.
Number One Referencing
Tip
Whenever you do an academic assignment make sure you write down the
full reference of each source as you find it. Many students, including myself in
the past, fail to do this.
Taking notes from the source for possible
inclusion in the written assignment is fine but if you do decide to use the
material, you can find yourself wasting hours of your valuable time trying to
remember the name of the book you returned to the library etc.
This
problem is particularly acute when students are doing a thesis or dissertation,
involving literally hundreds of references.
Writing references as you go
along may mean you record a host of references that you don't actually end up
using, however, the time wasted doing this pales into significance compared with
the alternative.
You can get more information on referencing and the best
free student resources available on the topic by visiting
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