Referencing in an essay
Referencing is acknowledging where you have quoted someone else or used their ideas in your essay. You need to reference within the body of your essay, as well as in your bibliography. There are a couple of different ways to do this:
In-text referencing
This is the most common way to reference, and it involves placing some basic details about the source in brackets next to the quote. An in-text reference should include:
Footnotes and endnotes
Another way to reference a quote or idea is by using footnotes and endnotes.
Both footnotes and endnotes usually involve a small in-text number that appears next to the quote. This number points the reader to an area in the text where they can find the quote's bibliographical details.
These details can be found either at the end of a chapter or essay – endnotes – or at the bottom of each page – footnotes.
Some abbreviations that appear in footnotes and endnotes include:
You probably won't need to use footnotes and endnotes until upper secondary school or university, but it's worth knowing how they work so you can recognise them when you're reading.
Information sources and adapted from State Library Victoria
Important - all copyright images
Any image used in your assignment that are not your own work requires an in-text citation to the original source.
A caption should include:
e.g. Takver (2013)
See 'Write a bibliography - Images' for more information
Icons sourced from Freepik