Standard Styles in RRL Citations or References
Standard Styles in RRL Citations or References
Standard Styles in RRL Citations or References
CITATIONS OR REFERENCES
Expression of appreciation/ recognition of
people’s ownership or borrowed ideas.
1. Acknowledgement- beginning portion of the work that identifies
individuals who have contributed something for the prodction of
the paper.
2. References/ Bibliography- a complete list of all reading materials,
inclding books, journals, periodicals, etc. from where the borrowed
ideas came from
3. Citation/ In-text Citation- references within the main body of the
text, specifically in RRL.
In-text Citation
Purposes of Citation
1. Give importance and respect to other people for what they know
about the field.
2. Give authority, validity, and credibility to other people’s claims,
conclusions and arguments.
3. Prove your broad and extensive reading of authentic and relevant
materials about the topic.
4. Help readers find or contact the sources of ideas easily.
5. Permit readers to check the accuracy of your work.
6. Save yourself from plagiarism.
Styles of Citation
1. Integral Citation- This is one way of citing or referring to the author
whose ideas appear in your work.You do this by using active verbs
like claim, assert, state, etc. to report the author’s ideas. Using
these types of verbs somehow expresses the author’s mental
position, attitude, stand or opinion in relation to the information
referred to. This is the reason integral citation is often used in social
sciences or any subjects belonging to the soft sciences.
- are part of the sentence (they are integrated into the sentence).
ex. Weeks (2013) shows that population growth effects are dependent
on societal structures.
Example of Integral Citation
APA
One study by Manalo (2015) reveals…….
The latter work by (Lee, 2015) asserts…..
According to Abad et al. (2015) context is-----
MLA
One study by (Manalo 70)
The latest work by (Lee 123)
According to (Abad et al.: 54)
2. Non-integral Citation- The stress is given to the piece of information
rather than to the owner of the ideas.
-are not part of the sentence (they are not integrated into the
sentence)
Ex. Population growth effects are dependent on societal structures
(Weeks, 2013).
Patterns of Citation
1. Summary- The citation in this case is a shortened version of the
original text that is expressed in your own language. With this, you
have to pick only the most important ideas.
2. Paraphrase- Here, you explain what the text means to you using
your own words. With this, it is possible that your explanations may
decrease or exceed the number of words of the original text.
3. Short Direct Quotation- Only a part of the author’s sentence, whole
sentence, or several sentances, not exceeding 40 words, is what you
can quote or repeat in writing through this citation process.
4. Long Direct Quotation / Block Quotation/ Extract
- This citation pattern makes you copy the author’s exact words
numbering from 40 up to 100 words. Under APA, the limit is 8 lines.
Placed at the center of the page with no indention, the copied lines
look they compose a stanza of a poem.
- You need to quote judiciously
- Having many quoted words signals your lack of understanding of sch
part of the text. (signals lack of originality)
- To avoid negation connotations about direct quotations, have in mind
the following reasons to justify your act of quoting or repeating in
writing other people’s words:
1. The idea is quite essential.
2. The idea is refutable or arguable.
3. The sentence is ambiguous or has multiple meanings.
4. There’s a strong possibility that questions may be raised about the
citation.
5. It is an excellent idea that to make it a part of your paper will bring
prestige and credibility to your entire work.
2 Methods of Referencing
1. APA- American Psychological Association
Sample in text citation
(Ramos, 2015)
2. MLA- Modern Language Association
Sample in text citation
(Bautista 183)
(Acosta, Hizon, Lopez 235-240)
(Velarde 4: 389-403)- for periodicals
5. Tense of verbs for reporting
Active verbs are effective words to use in reporting author’s ideas.
Present their ideas in any of these tenses: present, simple past, or
present perfect tense. The APA system, prefers the use of present
perfect tense.
Present tense- Marcos explains…..
Past Tense- Marcos explained…..
Present perfect tense- Marcos has explained …….
Plagiarism
• An act of quoting or copying the exact words of the writer and
passing the quoted words off as your own words. The leading act of
plagiarism is using the words of the original text in expressing your
understanding of the reading material. The right way to avoid
plagiarism is to express the borrowed ideas in your own words.