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APA REFERENCING

• Every time you make a statement, a claim, an assertion, an opinion,


you MUST show your audience the EVIDENCE on which it is based.
Degree study, especially at the Bachelor level, is built on establishing
the validity, reliability, integrity, and relevance of the evidence that
underpins one’s opinions.
• When you refer to someone else’s words or ideas in your text, the
source should be acknowledged by stating the author and year. You
must always acknowledge your sources otherwise you will be guilty of
plagiarism. 
• It is important that you follow the correct procedures and get
everything in the right place.
• Microsoft Word has an inbuilt referencing element that will help you
with getting the right format for APA, but you need to know a bit
about what it is in order to be able to use this.
• Please note that the following material has been sourced from a
variety of places including the APA official website
(http://www.apastyle.org) and the Publication Manual of the
American Psychological Association (7th ed.).

IN-TEXT CITATIONS
APA is known as an author-date style of referencing because only the
author’s surname and the year of publication are necessary to refer to
in the body of the essay itself. The underlying principle is that ideas
and words of others must be formally acknowledged.
BOOKS AND JOURNALS
Most of your citations should come from books (in the library) and
journals (also known as periodicals).

 When the names of the authors of a source are part of the formal
structure of the sentence, the year of publication appears in
parentheses following the identification of the authors.
Consider the following example:
Veish and Langer (2015, p. 39) found that microneedle
patches for monitoring a diabetic patients’ blood glucose levels
helps them to easily manage their need for insulin.

[Note: and is used when multiple authors are identified as part of
the formal structure of the
sentence. Compare this to the example in the following section.

 When the authors of a source are not part of the formal structure
of the sentence, both the authors and year of publication appear in
parentheses.
Consider the following example:
Reviews of research on religion and health have concluded that at
least some types of religious behaviours are related to higher
levels of physical and mental health (Agli et al., 2014; DeAngelis &
Ellison, 2018; Krause & Hayward, 2016;
Jones, 2018; Salsman et al., 2015; VanderWeele, 2017).
[Note: & is used when multiple authors are identified in
parenthetical material. Note also that when
several sources are cited parenthetically, they are ordered
alphabetically by first authors' surnames
and separated by semicolons.]
Also please note that no page number is included in the above
example because it is the
whole study or whole book that is being referred to.
MULTIPLE AUTHORS
When a source that one or two authors, include the author name(s)
every time the source is cited.
In parenthetical citations, use an ampersand (&) between names for a
work with two authors or
before the last author when all names must be included to avoid
ambiguity. In narrative citations,
spell out the word “and”.
Consider the following examples:
(Luna, 2020)
Luna (2020) state ….
(Salas & D’Agostino, 2020)
Salas and D’Agonostino (2020) argue that…
When a source that has three or more authors is cited, include the
name of only the first author
plus “et al.” (an abbreviation of “et alia” which means “and others”) in
every citation, including the
first citation, unless doing so would create ambiguity.
Consider the following example:
Reviews of research on religion and health have concluded that at
least some types of
religious behaviours are related to higher levels of physical and mental
health (Salsman
et al., 2015, p. 3761).
Salsman et al. (2015, p. 3761) showed that ...
In the reference list a source which has three or more authors, ALL
the authors (up to 20) are spelt
out in the reference list. If there are more than 21 authors “…” is used
between the 19th author and
the last author. APA 7th ed. replaces all authors between the 19th and
last author with “. . .”.
For example:
Kalnay, E., Kanamitsu, M., Kistler, R., Collins, W., Deaven, D., Gandin, L.,
Iredell, M., Saha,
S., White, G., Woolen, J., Zhu, Y., Chelliah, M., Ebisuzaki, W., Higgins,
W., Janowiak,
J., Mo, K.C., Ropelewski, C., Wang, J., Leetmaa, A., … Joseph, D. (1996).
The
NCEP/NCAR 40-year reanalysis project. Bulletin of the American
Meteorological
Society, 77(3), 437-471. http://doi.org/fg6rf9
And in the citation, it is (Kalnay et al., 1996)

AVOIDING AMBIGUITY – WHICH ONE IS WHICH?


Sometimes multiple works with three or more authors and the same
publication year shorten to the
same in-text citation, which creates ambiguity (more than one
interpretation). To avoid this, when
the in-text citations of multiple works with three or more authors
shorten to the same form, write
out as many names as needed to distinguish the references and
abbreviate the rest of the names to
“et al.” in every citation.
For example, two works have the following authors:
Maxwell, Scourfield, Holland, Featherstone, and Lee (2012)
Maxwell, Scourfield, Featherstone, Holland, and Tolman (2012)
Both these citations shortened to Maxwell et al. (2012). To avoid
ambiguity when citing them both
in your work, cite them as follows:
Maxwell, Scourfield, Holland, et al. (2012)
Maxwell, Scourfield, Featherstone, et al. (2012)
Because “et al.” is plural (meaning “and others”, it cannot stand for only
one name. When only the
final author is different, spell out all names in every citation.
Hasan, Liang, Kahn, and Jones-Miller (2015)
Hasan, Liang, Kahn, and Weintraub (2015)
WORKS WITH THE SAME AUTHOR AND SAME YEAR
When multiple references have an identical author (or authors) and
publication year, include a
lowercase letter (a, b, c, etc.) after the year. The year-letter
combination is used in both the in-text
citation and the refence list entry. Use only the year with a letter in
the in-text citation, even if the
reference list entry contains a more specific date.
For example:
(Judge & Kammeyer-Mueller, 2012a)
Judge and Kammeyer-Mueller (2012b)
And
(Sifuentes, n.d.-a, n.d.-b)
Assign the letters a, b, etc. in the order the works appear in your
reference list. Your reference list is
arranged alphabetically by author, then year, then title. In the titles,
J comes before O, so these two
references will be ordered like this in the reference list:
Judge, T. A., & Kammeyer-Mueller, J. D. (2012a). Job attitudes. Annual
Review of Psychology, 63, 341-
67. https://doi.org/10.10.1146/annurev-psych-120710-100511
Judge, T. A., & Kammeyer-Mueller, J. D. (2012b). On the value of
aiming high: The causes and
consequences of ambition. Journal of Applied Psychology, 97(4), 758-
775.
https://doi.org/10.1037.a0028084
AUTHORS WITH SAME SURNAME
If the first authors of multiple references share the same surname
but have different initials, include
the first authors’ initials in all in-text citations, even if the year of
publication differs. Initials help
avoid confusion within the text and help readers locate the correct
entry in the reference list.
For example:
(J. Taylor & Neimeyer, 2015; G. Taylor, 2015)
If the authors have the same surname and the same initials, then you
write out their given names in
full.
For example:
(James Taylor, 2015) and (John Taylor, 2015)
CITING A SOURCE MULTIPLE TIMES IN ONE PARAGRAPH
Sometimes you might want to use one particular source several times
during one paragraph.
Putting an in-text citation after every sentence that comes from that
source would look awful and
break the flow of your writing… but leaving the in-text citations out
risks plagiarism.
Introduce the source early in the paragraph, with the author as part
of the sentence rather than in
brackets. For example: Bryman (2016, p. 100) describes several
aspects of the data gathering
process.
For the rest of the paragraph, you can refer back to the author by
name or pronoun when
elaborating on their ideas. For example: He notes that the relevance
and number of questions can
affect participation rates. Bryman also found that…
As long as it is clear to the reader that all of the ideas come from
that same source, there is no risk
of plagiarism and the paragraph flows well.
It is NOT ACCEPTABLE to use several statements or ideas from one
source throughout a paragraph
and use one citation at the end of the paragraph to “cover” all the
information within. If only one
citation is used at the end it appears that only the final sentence is
from that particular source, and
the rest of the information is the writer’s own ideas. THIS IS STILL
PLAGIARISM. A citation only
covers the sentence (or in the case of blocked quotations that are
longer than 40 words, the
quotation) that it is part of. One citation at the end of a paragraph
DOES NOT cover the entire
paragraph.
Note that if you put the author's name in brackets later on in the
paragraph (for example, if
you include a quotation from that source) you should always include the
year of publication
in the brackets.
WHICH SOURCES SHOULD I USE?
The best sources to use in academic writing are those that have been
through some kind of review
process. When an article gets submitted to a journal it is read and
critiqued by other academics.
This is known as peer review. Books go through a similar process in the
publishing world.
Sources such as Wikipedia, or random pages on the internet have not
been through a peer review
process, and so are not generally favoured by your tutors as valid and
appropriate sources to use in
your essays. However, it depends what you are using the source to
support. The Shure Microphone
website, for example, might be appropriate to use in a Business
assignment when you are asked to
provide evidence of specifications of a particular microphone, but not
credible to use to back up an
academic discussion about microphones in a general sense.
Think about the sources you are choosing when you write your
assignments. Ask yourself:
• Is there a date?
• Is there a name?
• Is there evidence of some kind of review process before it has gone
on the internet?
Academic writing and APA referencing is about quality of sources.
Ideally your information should
have quality.

SOURCES THAT YOU HAVEN’T READ YOURSELF


Every effort should be made to cite only sources that you have
actually read. When it is necessary to
cite a source that you have not read ("Hayes" in the following example)
that is cited in a source that
you have read ("Bell & Waters" in the following example), use the
following format for the text
citation and list only the source you have read in the Reference list:
In-text citation:
Hayes (as cited in Bell & Waters, 2014, p. 183) stated that research
focus groups… OR
Research focus groups… (Hayes, 2000, as cited in Bell & Waters,
2014).
Reference list:
Bell, J., & Waters, S. (2014). Doing your research project: A guide for
first-time researchers (6th ed.).
McGraw-Hill Education.

PERSONAL COMMUNICATIONS
These may be letters, memos, email, personal interviews, telephone
conversations, and the like.
However, in order to use a quotation from someone you must get that
person’s permission and
you must make notes of the interview or phone call.

You cannot quote someone without his or her knowledge and


permission. This is simply not ethical.
When a person is interviewed for this type of information, they may
request that you give them a
copy of your notes of the conversation to be approved by them, prior
to you using it in your
assignment.
Because personal communications are non-recoverable data, they are
not included in the reference
list. Cite them in the text only. Give the initials as well as the surname
of the communicator and
provide as exact a date as possible.
E.M Paradis (personal communication, August 8, 2019)
Or
(T. Nguyen, personal communication, February 24, 2020)

DOIS AND URLS


A digital object identifier (DOI) is a unique alphanumeric string that
identifies content and provides
a persistent link to its location on the internet. DOIs can be found in
database records and the
reference lists of published works.
A uniform resource locator (URL) specifies a location of digital
information on the internet and can
be found in the address bar of your internet browser. URLs in
references should link directly to the
cited work when possible.
Include a DOI for all works that have a DOI, regardless of whether
you used the online version or
the print version. If a print work does not have a DOI, do not include a
DOI or URL in the reference.
If an online work has both a DOI and a URL, include only the DOI.
If an online work has a URL but no DOI, include the URL in the
reference as follows:
• For works without DOIs from websites (not including academic
research databases),
provide a URL in the reference (as long as the URL will work for
readers).
For example:
• For works without DOIs from most academic research databases, do
not include a URL or
database information in the reference because these works are widely
available. The
reference should be the same as the reference for a print version of
the work. Examples of
academic research databases and platforms that are widely available
include CINAHL,
Ebook Central, EBSCOhost, Google Scholar, JSTOR, MEDLINE,
Science Direct.
• For works from databases that publish works of limited circulation or
original, propriety
material available only in that database (e.g. intranet material for an
organization), include
the name of the database and the URL of the work. If the URL
requires a login, provide the
URL of the database or archive home page or login page instead of the
URL for the work.
FORMAT OF DOIS AND URLS
Present both DOIs and URLs as hyperlinks (i.e. beginning with “http:”
or “https:”).
Because a hyperlink leads readers directly to the content, it is not
necessary to include the words
“Retrieved from” or “Accessed from” before a DOI or URL.
It is acceptable to use either the default settings for hyperlinks in
your word processing program
(e.g. usually blue font, underlined) or plain text that is not underlined.
Links should be live of the work is to be published or read online.
The format for the DOI in the reference list is:
https://doi.org/xxxxx
The string “https://doi.org/” is a way of presenting a DOI as a link,
and “xxxxx” refers to the DOI
number.

This DOI format is a direct link to the work. It simplifies and


standardizes retrieval.
• Copy and paste the DOI or URL from your web browser directly onto
your reference list to
avoid transcription errors.
• DO not change the capitalisation or punctuation of the DOI or URL.
• DO not add line breaks manually to the hyperlink, it is acceptable if
your word=processing
program automatically adds a break or moves the hyperlink to its own
line.
• Do not add a period (full stop) after the DOI or URL because it may
interfere with the link
functionality.
• When a DOI or URL is long or complex, you may use a shortDOIs or
shortened URL if
desired. Use the shortDOI service provided by the International DOI
Foundation
(http://shortdoi.org/). Enter a cut and paste of the DOI and this
service will create a new
shortDOI.
ONLINE SOURCES
You will also need to use sources from the internet when you write
essays. Some of these have
authors, some have titles only and no author, and some have no date.
There are rules to follow in all
of these scenarios.
• If there is an author use the author-date format, just like you would
for a book or article, for
example (Smith, 1990).
• If no author is identified, use the first few words of the title in
place of the author. These
must be placed within double quotation marks, for example, (“Eating
Tomatoes,” 1990).
• If no date is provided, use "n.d." in place of the date, for example,
(“Eating Tomatoes,” n.d.)
• To cite a specific part of a source, indicate the page, chapter, figure,
table, or equation at the
appropriate point in text. Always give page numbers for quotations.
Note that the words
page and chapter are abbreviated in such text citations:
Example:
(Cheek & Buss, 1981, p. 332)
(Shimamura, 1989, chap. 3)
For electronic sources that do not provide page numbers, use the
paragraph number, if available,
preceded by the abbreviation para.
Example:
(Myers, 2000, para. 5)
Do not cite the URL in the body of the essay. This information will be
put into the reference list
(at the end of the essay).
The only exception to this is if you are referring to an entire website
in general in your essay, then
you would provide the name of the website in the text and include the
URL in parentheses. For
example, you might write: We created our survey using Qualtrics
(https://www.qualtrics.com).
OR
Marketing and branding of the All Blacks is an integral part of their
commodification. This is
exemplified by Allblacks.com (http://www.allblacks.com/).

SOCIAL MEDIA
If you paraphrase or quote information from social media, provide a
reference list entry and in-text
citation (author and year).
Author. (year, month, day). Title [format]. Website name. https://...
• Include either the author’s last name and initials or the corporate
author name.
• Provide any social medial identity information in square brackets
after the name.
• Provide as specific a date as is available on the webpage. This might
be a year only; a year
and month; or a year, month and day.
• If the date is unknown, use n.d. (for no date) in parentheses, e.g.
(n.d.). If the date is
unknown but can be approximated use “ca.” (for circa) followed by the
approximated year
in square brackets, e.g. [ca. 2017]. If you use either n.d. or ca., you will
need to also include
the date you retrieved the information.
• For the title, put the name of the page or the caption of the post as
the title. If there is no
caption or title on the post, use the first words of the post. Put the
title in italics.
• Put the format after the title in square brackets, e.g. [Instagram
photograph], [Tweet],
[Status update], [@username].
Facebook examples:
Invercargill City Council. (n.d.). About Invercargill City Council
[Facebook page]. Retrieved
November 29, 2019, from
https://www.facebook.com/pg/InvercargillCityCouncil/about/?
ref=page_internal
New Zealand Red Cross. (2019, November 27). As the number of
people suspected to have contracted
measles [Status update]. Facebook.
https://www.facebook.com/NewZealandRedCross/posts/27451644988
60631

Instagram examples:
University of Canterbury Lib [@uclibrary]. (2018, November 27). UC’s
architectural drawings
declared a national heritage treasure! Housed at the Macmillan Brown
Library, the Armson
Collins Architectural Drawings Collection [Photograph]. Instagram.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BqrJg7Agu75/
University of Canterbury Lib [@uclibrary]. (n.d.). Posts, followers,
following [Profile]. Instagram.
https://www.instagram.com/uclibrary/
Twitter examples:
Ministry of Health [@minhealthnz]. (2017, April 3). Typhoid [Tweet].
Twitter.
https://twitter.com/aklpublichealth/status/849041745186660357
Trump, D. J. [@realDonaldTrump]. (2017, March 7). I am working on a
new system where there will
be competition in the drug industry [Tweet]. Twitter.
https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/839110000870109184

BIBLE / QURAN
To cite the Bible or the Quran, provide the book, chapter, and verse.
The first time the Bible is cited
in the text, identify the version used. Consider the following example:
"You are forgiving and good, O Lord, abounding in love to all who call to
you" (Psalm 86:5,
New International Version).
Note: No entry in the References list is needed for the Bible or Quran
as they are considered a
classical work, and only require an in-text citation.

DIRECT QUOTATIONS
When a direct quotation is used, always include the author, year, and
page number as part of the
citation.
A quotation of fewer than 40 words should be enclosed in double
quotation marks and should be
incorporated into the formal structure of the sentence. Example:
Patients receiving prayer had "less congestive heart failure, required
less diuretic and
antibiotic therapy, had fewer episodes of pneumonia, had fewer
cardiac arrests, and were
less frequently intubated and ventilated" (Vance, 2001, p. 829).
A lengthier quotation of 40 words or more should appear (without
quotation marks) apart from the
surrounding text, in block format, with each line indented five spaces
from the left margin. See the
example on page 36 and in the specimen essay provided at the end of
this guideline.
For indented quotations the citation comes AFTER the full stop at the
end of the quote.
Note that pp. is the plural version of p. For example: (Smith & Jones,
2018, pp. 123-125).
DIRECT QUOTATION OF MATERIAL WITHOUT PAGE NUMBERS
To directly quote from written material that does not contain page
numbers, such as a webpages or
website, provide another way of locating the quoted passage, such as a
heading or section name, or
a paragraph number.
For example:
Osteoarthritis, “although often described as simply due to wear and
tear, it is now thought to be the
result of a number of factors including inflammation, injury or ageing”
(Arthritis New Zealand, n.d.,
“What is osteoarthritis” section).
“Singing is distinguished from speaking by the manner in which the
breath is expended to vibrate
the vocal cords” (Encyclopaedia Britannica, 2018, para.2).
PARAPHRASING
Paraphrasing (putting someone else’s ideas into your own words) must
also be acknowledged by a
citation. APA 7th edition is also a little quirky with regard to whether
or not paraphrasing requires
only the surname and year in the citation, or the page number as well.
The Publication Manual of the
American Psychological Association suggests that the page number is
“encouraged” when
paraphrasing, as it helps interested readers locate the relevant
passage with a source.
At SIT we are interpreting this as “do it”. Therefore, even when
paraphrasing ALWAYS SUPPLY A
PAGE NUMBER.
REFERENCING
As stated previously, every assignment should be accompanied by a
reference list. SIT uses the APA
style of referencing, although there are many others and you will come
across these as you read and
research your assignments. There are many rules that are part of APA
that you need to follow when
you prepare your reference list. Again, it is important that you get this
right and get the commas
and full stops in the right place. You will lose marks in your
assignments if you do not follow the
correct format. References cited in the text of your essay must
appear in the reference list and vice
versa.
The reference list begins on a separate page.
Entries in your reference list appear in alphabetical order by the
surname of the first author.
APA uses a hanging indent. This is where the lower lines hang inwards
underneath the top
line.
APA has opposite rules for capitalisation of titles (as mentioned
earlier) between the
in-text citations and the reference list (sentence case).
Sentence case is used for capitalisation of reference list titles.
Capitalise only the first
letter (and any proper nouns) of titles and subtitles of any book,
articles, reports, webpages
chapters, and titles of unpublished periodicals in refence list entries.
Capitalise the first
letter of all significant words in periodical titles (they are treated like
proper nouns).
6.
APA citations and refences use an ampersand (&) between authors’
surnames, NOT “and”.
But if you are using the authors’ surnames in a sentence then “and” is
used, as per the
normal rules of writing.
7.
Present both DOIs and URLs in your refence list as hyperlinks (i.e.
beginning with “http:” or
“https:”). It is acceptable to use either the default display settings
for hyperlinks (e.g. usually
blue font, underlined) or plain text that is not underlined. Leave links
live if the work is to
be published or read online. THIS IS A SIGNIFICANT CHANGE
FROM APA 6th edition.
When a DOI or URL is long or complex, you may use a shortDOIs or
shortened URL if
desired. Use the shortDOI service provided by the International DOI
Foundation
(http://shortdoi.org/). Enter a cut and paste of the DOI and this
service will create a new
shortDOI.
9 DO not include a retrieval date for a reference, unless it is from a
webpage that is inherently
designed to change (e.g. a dictionary entry, Twitter profile, Facebook
page, map generated
by Google Maps) or reflects information that changes over time (a
website that updates
information frequently, such as Stats NZ). Provide a retrieval date,
when needed, before the
URL, e.g., Retrieved December 2, 2019, from https://xxxxx
10. APA 7th edition DOES NOT REQUIRE that the city, state (US) or
country where the book was
published to be provided. THIS IS A SIGNIFICANT CHANGE FROM
APA 6th edition.
REFERENCE LIST AND CITATION FORMAT EXAMPLES
BOOKS AND REFERENCE WORKS
The books category includes authored books, edited books,
anthologies, religious works and
classical works. The reference works category includes dictionaries,
encyclopedias and diagnostic
manuals.

BOOK WITHOUT A DOI, A PRINT VERSION


Format:
Author, A. A. (year). Title of book. Publisher.
Reference:
Lloyd Owen, D. A. (2018). Smart water technologies and techniques:
Data capture and analysis for
sustainable water management. John Wiley & Sons.
Citation:
According to Lloyd Owen (2018, p.2) … OR … (Lloyd Owen, 2019, p. 2)
BOOK WITH A DOI OR URL, RETRIEVED ONLINE

Include the DOI if available

Include the URL if there is no DOI and the URL is accessible to all
readers
Note: Do not use a URL from an online academic library database, as
this is not generally accessible
to all readers (i.e., a student login has been required). Add nothing if
there is no DOI nor a generally
accessible URL – the reference is the same for a print book.
If a DOI is available
Format:
Author, A. A. (year). Title of book. Publisher. https://doi.org/xxxx
Reference:
Cameron-Smith, A. (2019). A doctor across borders: Raphael Cilento
and public health from empire to
the United Nations. Australian National University Press.
https://doi.org/10.22459/DAB.2019
Citation:
According to Cameron-Smith (2010, p.17) … OR … (Cameron-Smith,
2019, p. 17)
If there is no DOI but there is a URL accessible to all readers
Format:
Author, A. A. (year). Title of book. Publisher. https://www....
Reference:
Scanlon, V. C., & Sanders, T. (2007). Essentials of anatomy and
physiology (5th ed.). F.A. Davis.
https://yhdp.net/uploads/Essentials-of-Anatomy-and-Physiology.pdf
Citation:
According to Scanlon and Sanders (2007, p.46) … OR … (Scanlon &
Sanders, 2007, p. 46)
If there is no DOI and it has been accessed from an online library
database
Format:
Author, A. A. (year). Title of book. Publisher.
Reference:
Budras, K.-D., Greenough, P. R., Habel, R. E., & Műlling, C. K. W. (2011).
Bovine anatomy (2nd ed.).
Schlűtersche.
Citation:
Budras et al. (2011) state … OR
… (Budras et al., 2011)
BOOK, EDITION OTHER THAN THE FIRST
Format – print example:
Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (year). Title of book (2nd ed.). Publisher.
Reference:
Marieb, E. N., & Hoehn, K. (2016). Human anatomy & physiology (10th
ed.). Pearson.
Citation:
According to Marieb and Hoehn (2016, p. 419) … OR … (Marieb &
Hoehn, 2016, p. 419)
EDITED BOOK WITHOUT A DOI
Format:
Editor, A. A., & Editor, B. B. (Eds.). (year). Title of book. Publisher.
Reference:
Lindquist, R., Snyder, M., & Tracy, M. F. (Eds.). (2014). Complementary
& alternative therapies in
nursing (7th ed.). Springer.
Citation:
Lindquist et al. (2014) … OR … (Lindquist et al., 2014)
EDITED BOOK WITH A DOI
Format:
Editor, A. A. (Ed.). (year). Title of book. Publisher.
https://doi.org/10.xxxx/xxxxxx
Reference:
Helbich, M. (Ed.). (2018). Frontiers in mental health and the
environment. MDPI.
https://doi.org/10.3390/books978-3-03897-391-1
Citation:
Helbich (2018) … OR … (Helbich, 2018)
BOOK IN ANOTHER LANGUAGE
When a book is in a different language, include a translation of the
book title in square brackets.
Format:
Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (year). Title of book [Translation of book
title]. Publisher.
Reference:
Molinari, E., & Labella, A. (2007). Psicologia clinica: Dialoghi e confronti
[Clinical psychology:
Dialogue and confrontation]. Springer.
Amano, N., & Kondo, H. (2003). Nihongo no goi tokusei [Lexical
characteristics of Japanese
Language] (Vol. 7). Sanseido.
Citation:
Molinari and Labella (2007, p. 25) state … OR … (Molinari & Labella,
2007, p. 25)
Amono and Kondo (2003) state … OR … (Amono & Kondo, 2003)
BOOK REPUBLISHED WITH A TRANSLATOR
Format:
Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (year). Title of book (T. Translator,
Trans.). Publisher. (Original work
published year).
Reference:
Schiller, F. (2018). Don Carlos infant of Spain: A dramatic poem (F.
Kimmich, Trans.). Open Book.
(Original work published 1804).
Citation:
Schiller (1804/2018, p.19) … OR
… (Schiller, 1804/2018, p.19)
ONE VOLUME OF A MULTIVOLUME WORK
If the volume does not have its own title, include the volume number in
parentheses without italics.
Reference:
Berman, A., Snyder, S. J., Levett-Jones, T., Dwyer, T., Hales, M.,
Harvey, N., Luxford, Y., Moxham, L.,
Park, T., Parker, B., Reid-Searle, K., & Stanley, D. (2012). Kozier and
Erb’s fundamentals of
nursing (2nd ed., Vol. 2). Pearson.
Citation:
Berman et al. (2012, p. 537) … OR … (Berman et al., 2012, p.537)
MANUAL, PRINT VERSION
When the author and publisher are the same, omit the publisher.
Reference:
Brother Industries. (n.d.). Reference guide: Brief explanations for
routine operations HS-J6000DW HL-
J6100DW.
Citation:
Brother Industries (n.d., p.1)… OR … (Brother Industries, n.d., p.1)
MANUAL, ONLINE ACCESS
Reference:
World Health Organization. (2019). International statistical
classification of diseases and related
health problems (11th ed.). https://icd.who.int/
Canterbury District Health Board. (2019, January 25). Hand hygiene
(Ref. 234641).
http://edu.cdhb.health.nz/Hospitals-Services/Health-Professionals/
CDHB-
Policies/Infection-Prevention-Control-Manual/Documents/Hand-
Hygiene-Policy.pdf
Citation:
World Health Organisation (2019) … OR … (World Health Organisation,
2019)
Canterbury District Heath Board (2019, p. 2) … OR … (Canterbury
District Health Board,
2019, p.2)
DICTIONARY, THESAURUS OR ENCYCLOPEDIA
When the author and publisher are the same, omit the publisher.
Reference – print example:
Merriam-Webster. (2019). Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary
(11th ed.).
Citation:
Merriam-Webster (2019) …
62
OR … (Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, 2019)
When an online reference work is continuously updated (as with
Merriam-Webster.com
Dictionary), use “n.d” as the year of publication and include a retrieval
date.
Reference - online example:
Merriam-Webster. (n.d.). Merriam-Webster.com dictionary. Retrieved
November 28, 2019, from
https://www.merriam-webster.com/
Citation:
Merriam-Webster (n.d.) … OR
… (Merriam-Webster, n.d.)
ANTHOLOGY
Anthologies are collections of multiple works, either by the same
author or organized around the
same theme. How you cite and anthology depends if you are citing the
entire anthology, or a single
work included in it (see work in an anthology).
Format:
Editor, E. (Ed.). (year). Anthology title (Volume number if applicable).
Publisher.
Reference:
D’Este, S., & Rankine, D. (Eds.). (2013). The faerie queens – a collection
of essays exploring the myths,
magic and mythology of the faerie queens. Avalonia.
Citation:
D’Este and Rankine (2013) … OR
… (D’Este & Rankine, 2013)
EDITED BOOK CHAPTERS, ENTRIES IN REFERENCE WORKS
This includes chapters of edited books, and the entries in reference
works includes dictionary,
thesaurus and encyclopedia entries.
Use the table above to assist with references for edited book
chapters and entries in reference
works.

CHAPTER FROM AN EDITED BOOK WITHOUT A DOI


Format:
Author, A. A. (year). Title of chapter. In B. Editor & C. Editor (Eds.),
Title of book (2nd ed., pp. pages
of chapter). Publisher.
Reference:
Casida, J.E. (2010). Pest toxicology: The primary mechanisms of
pesticide action. In R. Krieger (Ed.),
Hayes’ handbook of pesticide toxicology (3rd ed., pp. 103-117).
Academic Press.
Citation:
Casida (2010, p. 105) states …
OR
… (Casida, 2010, p. 105)
CHAPTER FROM AN EDITED BOOK WITH A DOI
Format:
Author, A. A. (year). Title of chapter. In B. Editor & C. Editor (Eds.),
Title of book (2nd ed., pp. pages
of chapter). Publisher. Https://doi.org/10.xxxx/xxxxxx
Reference:
Wall, R., & Rafferty, A. M. (2017). Trouble with “status”: Competing
models of British and North
American public health nursing education and practice in British
Malaya. In H. Pols., C.M.
Thompson., & J. H. Warner (Eds.), Translating the body: Medical
education in Southeast Asia
(pp. 67-94). Nuss Press. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1xxzqp
Citation:
Wall and Rafferty (2017, p. 82) state … OR … (Wall & Rafferty, 2017,
p.82)

ENTRY IN A DICTIONARY, THESAURUS OR ENCYCLOPEDIA,


WITH KNOWN AUTHOR
Format – print example:
Author, A. A. (Year). Title of entry. In E. Editor (Ed.), Name of
encyclopedia or dictionary (Volume
number, pp. first page of entry-last page of entry). Publisher.
Reference:
King, P. N., & Wester, L. (1998). Hawaii. In The world book
encyclopedia (Vol. 9, pp. 88-110). World
Book.
Citation:
King and Wester (1998, p. 91) … OR … (King & Wester, 1998, p. 91)
When an online reference work is continuously updated (as with
Merriam-Webster.com
Dictionary), use “n.d” as the year of publication and include a retrieval
date.
Format – online example:
Author, A. A. (Year). Title of entry. In Name of encyclopedia or
dictionary. Retrieved Month Date,
from https://www.xxxx
Reference:
Merriam-Webster. (n.d.). Piano. In Merriam-Webster.com dictionary.
Retrieved December 2, 2019,
from https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/piano
Selanders, L. (n.d.). Florence Nightingale. In Encyclopedia Britannica.
Retrieved December 2, 2019,
from https://www.britannica.com/biography/Florence-Nightingale
Citation:
Merriam-Webster (n.d., para.1) … OR
… (Merriam-Webster, n.d., para.1)
Selanders (n.d., para. 2) … OR … (Selanders, n.d., para. 2)
SPECIFIC WORK IN AN ANTHOLOGY
To cite a specific work within the anthology, place the author of the
work first. The
editor/anthology information is also included.
Format:
Author, A. A. (year). Title of work: Subtitle if necessary. In E. Editor
(Ed.), Title of anthology:
subtitle (Volume number or page numbers). Publisher. (Original work
published Year)
Reference:
Fassbinder, R.W. (1992). Imitation of life: On the films of Douglas
Sirk. In M. Töteberg & L. A.
Lensing (Eds.), The anarchy of the imagination (pp. 77-89). The Johns
Hopkins University
Press. (Original work published 1971)
Citation:
Fassbinder (1971/1992) … OR … (Fassbinder, 1971/1992)

PERIODICALS
Periodicals include journals, magazines, newspapers, newsletters and
even blogs and other online
platforms that publish articles. Journals and periodicals might have
volume/issue numerals. For
example, they might be volume 6, number 2. In this case the volume
numeral is in italics followed
by the number in brackets but not italics. Example; 34(2).
Use the table above to assist with references for periodical articles.

JOURNAL ARTICLE WITH A DOI


Use sentence capitalisation in the article title. Capitalise the first
letter of each main word in the
journal title. Italicise the journal title and volume number. Add the
issue number if available,
Include the DOI number; it usually appears on the first page of the
article.
Format:
Author, A. A., Author, B. B., & Author, C. C. (year). Title of article.
Title of Periodical, xx, pp-pp.
https://doi.org/xxxx
Reference:
Montayre, J., Dimalapang, E., Sparks, T., & Neville, S. (2019). New
Zealand nursing students’
perceptions of biosciences: A cross-sectional survey of relevance to
practice, teaching
delivery, self-competence and challenges. Nurse Education Today, 79,
48-53.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nedt.2019.05.013
Citation:
Montayre et al. (2019, p. 52) states … OR … (Montayre et al., 2019, p.
52)
JOURNAL ARTICLE WITH NO DOI, WITH A NONDATABASE URL
Only include the URL if the article is accessible online to all readers.
Do not include a URL from a
library database; in these cases, the reference ends after the page
range.
Format:
Author, A. A., Author, B. B., & Author, C. C. (year). Title of article.
Title of Periodical, xx, pp-pp.
https://xxxxx
Reference:
Akin, D., & Huang, L. M. (2019). Perceptions of college students with
disabilities. Journal of
Postsecondary Education and Disability, 32(1), 21-33.
https://www.ahead.org/professional-
resources/publications/jped/archieved-jped/jped-volume-32
Citation:
According to Akin and Huang (2019, p.21) …
OR … (Akin & Huang, 2019, p.21)
JOURNAL ARTICLE WITHOUT A DOI, FROM AN ACADEMIC
RESEARCH DATABASE
This is for a journal article found on an academic institution database.
A URL for the database is
provided instead of a DOI, e.g. http://ezproxy.sit.ac.nz:xxxxx
Do not include the database name or URL.
Reference:
Whitehead, A., & Gould Fogerite, S. (2017). Yoga treatment for
chronic non-specific low back pain.
Explore: The Journal of Science & Healing, 13(4), 281-284.
Citation:
Whitehead & Gould Fogerite (2017, p. 282) states … OR … (Whitehead
& Gould Fogerite,
2017, p. 282)
JOURNAL ARTICLE WITH A DOI, 21 OR MORE AUTHORS
Because the original DOI was long and complex, a short DOI is used.
Either the long or short form of
the DOI is acceptable. List the first 19 authors, then use … and then
list the last author’s name.
Reference:
Gaudinski, M. R., Coates, E. E., Houser, K. V., Chend, G. L., Yamshchikov,
G., Saunders, J. G., Holmans, L.
A., Gordon, I., Plummer, S., Hendel, C. S., Conan-Cibotti, M., Lorenzo,
M., L., Sitar, S., Carlton,
K., Laurencot, C., Bailer, R. T., Narpala. S., McDermott, A. B.,
Namboodirir, A., M., …
Ledgerwood, J. E. (2018). Safety and pharmacokinetics of the Fc-
modified HIV-1 human
monoclonal antibody VRC01LS: A phase 1 open-label clinical trial in
healthy adults. PLoS
Med, 15(1), e1002493. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002493
Citation:
Gaudinski et al. (2018) states … OR … (Gaudinski et al., 2018)
JOURNAL ARTICLE WITH A DOI, COMBINATION OF
INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP AUTHORS
Reference:
Eysenbach, G., & CONSORT-EHEALTH Group. (2011). CONSORT-
EHEALTH: Improving and
standardizing evaluation reports of web-based and mobile health
interventions. Journal of
Medical Internet Research, 13(4), e126.
https://doi.org/10.2196/jmir.1923
Citation:
Eysenbach and CONSORT-EHEALTH (2011) state …. OR … (Eysenbach
& CONSORT-
EHEALTH 2011)
JOURNAL ARTICLE, IN PRESS
In press articles are peer reviewed, accepted articles that are going
to be published in a journal. The
article is yet to be assigned to a volume/issue. Although articles in
press do not have all the
bibliographic details available yet, they can be cited using the year of
online publication and the
DOI.
Reference:
Kreuzer, M., Cado, V., & Raïes. (2019). Moments of care: How
interpersonal interactions contribute
to luxury experience of healthcare consumers. Journal of Business
Research.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbusres.2019.11.033
Citation:
Kreuzer et at. (in press) … OR … (Kreuzer et al., in press)
MAGAZINE ARTICLE, ONLINE
Both the month and the date should be included after the year.
Reference:
Jousset, P. (2019, November 29). Illuminating earth’s faults. Science,
366(6469), 1076-1077.
https://science.sciencemag.org/content/366/6469/1076
Citation:
Jousett (2019) …. OR … (Jousett, 2019)
NEWSPAPER ARTICLE, ONLINE
Services like Stuff or Scoop are aggregate news contents. Don’t use
Stuff as the title or author.
If there is a newspaper title, include it in italics
Both the month and the date should be included after the year.
Reference:
Harding, E. (2019, November 21). Invercargill Kmart ready to open.
The Southland Times.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/117596378/invercargill-kmart-
ready-to-open
Citation:
Harding (2019) reported …. OR … (Harding, 2019)
NO NEWSPAPER TITLE, AUTHOR AND NO AUTHOR
If there is no newspaper title use the format for a webpage on a
website instead, e.g.
Reference:
Taunton, E. (2019, December 2). Low methane New Zealand sheep
coming to a farm near you. Stuff.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/business/farming/117862851/low-methane-
sheep-coming-to-a-
farm-near-you
Citation:
Taunton (2019) … OR … (Taunton, 2019)
N
No author - The reference list entry starts with the article title and
uses sentence case
capitalisation.
Reference:
Teaming up on health innovation. (2014, September 10). Manawatu
Standard.
http://www.stuff.co.nz/manawatu-standard/news/10480728/Teaming-
up-on-health-
innovation
Citation:
(“Teaming up on Health Innovation,” 2014)
MAGAZINE OR NEWSPAPER ARTICLE WITHOUT A DOI, FROM A
PRINT VERSION
Both the month and the date should be included after the year.
Precede page numbers for newspaper articles with p. or pp.
If an article appears on discontinuous pages, give all page numbers, and
separate the numbers with
a comma (e.g., pp. B1, B3, B5-7).
Reference:
Killick, D. (2012, June 25). Housing is a problem beyond politics. The
Press, p.17.
Citation:
According to Killick (2012) … OR … (Killick, 2012)
WEBPAGES ON WEBSITES
Use this reference category if no other reference category fits the
work you are referencing (e.g.
book, book chapters, journal articles, newspaper articles,
encyclopedias, dictionaries). If the author
and website name are the same, don’t repeat it as the source element.
Use the table below to assist with references for webpages or
websites.

Reference:
Templeton, S. (2019, June 4). Why your reusable shopping bag isn’t
better than a single-use plastic
one. Newshub.
https://www.newshub.co.nz/home/lifestyle/2019/06/why-your-
reusable-
shopping-bag-isn-t-better-than-a-single-use-plastic-one.html
Citation:
According to Templeton (2019) … OR
Shopping bags are … (Templeton, 2019).
If the author and website are the same don’t repeat it as the source
element. Include a retrieved
date is the information on a page that can be updated.
Reference:
Stats NZ. (n.d.). Population. Retrieved December 4, 2019, from
https://www.stats.govt.nz/topics/population
Citation:
Stats NZ (n.d.) … OR … (Stats NZ, n.d.).
WEBPAGE ON A WEBSITE WITH NO DATE
Do not use a date from a webpage or website footer because this date
may not indicate when the
content on the site was published. If no separate date is indicated for
the work on the webpage,
treat the work as having no date.
Reference:
Ministry of Education. (n.d.). Innovative learning environments. TKI.
http://elearning.tki.org.nz/Teaching/Innovative-learning-environments
Citations
Ministry of Education (n.d.) … OR
… (Ministry of Education, n.d.).
DOCUMENTS ON WEBSITES
Reference:
Ministry of Health. (2015). Eating and activity guidelines for New
Zealand adults.
https://www.health.govt.nz/system/files/documents/publications/eati
ng-activity-
guidelines-for-new-zealand-adults-oct15_0.pdf
Citation:
Ministry of Health (2015) … OR … (Ministry of Health, 2015).
WEBPAGE WITH NO AUTHOR LISTED
The author of a webpage may not be given in a normal byline, but it can
be determined from
context.
For a webpage from an organisational or government website, the
organisation or government
agency itself is the author, unless otherwise specified. The author may
also be located on an “about
us” or acknowledgements page.
REPORTS AND GRAY LITERATURE
There are many kinds of reports, including Government reports,
technical reports and research
reports. They are sometimes referred to as gray literature. Gray
literature also includes press
releases, codes of ethics, policy briefs, and annual reports
Use the table above to assist with references for reports and gray
literature.

REPORT BY GOVERNMENT AGENCY OR OTHER ORGANISATION


The specific agency responsible for the report appears as the author.
Look at the cover or title page
of the work. If the cover or title page lists only the name of the group
(and no names of individuals),
treat the reference as having a group author.
Omit the publisher name when the author and publisher are the same.
Reference – online example:
Australian Government Productivity Commission & New Zealand
Productivity Commission. (2019).
Growing the digital economy in Australia and New Zealand: Maximising
opportunities for SMEs.
https://www.productivity.govt.nz/assets/Research/b32acca009/Growi
ng-the-digital-
economy-in-Australia-and-New-Zealand_Final-Report.pdf
Citation:
Australian Government Productivity Commission and New Zealand
Productivity Commission
(2019, p. 59) reports… OR … (Australian Government Productivity
Commission & New
Zealand Productivity Commission, 2019, p. 59)
Reference – print example:
Ministry of Health. (2019). Progress on gambling harm reduction 2010
to 2017: Outcomes report –
New Zealand strategy to prevent and minimise gambling harm.
Citation – print example:
Ministry of Health (2019, p. 15) report states… OR … (Ministry of
Health, 2019, p. 15)
Spell out the full name of a group author in the refence list entry. An
abbreviation for the group
author can be used in the text, but not in the reference list entry.
First citation: According to the Ministry of Health (MOH, 2019) … OR
… (Ministry of Health
[MOH], 2019)
Subsequent citations: (MOH, 2019)
REPORT BY INDIVIDUAL AUTHORS AT A GOVERNMENT AGENCY
OR OTHER ORGANISATION
If the cover or title page list the names of individuals, treat the
reference as having individual
authors and in the name of the group as part of the source element.
Look to see if the document includes a suggested reference, the
author’s names included in that
reference indicate who should be credited (note that the format of
the suggested reference may
need to be adjusted for APA style 7th edition).
Reference – print example:
Skelton, P. (2019). Investigation of freshwater management and
allocation functions at Otago
Regional Council – Report to the Minister for the Environment.
Ministry for the Environment.
Citation:
Skelton (2019) states … OR
… (Skelton, 2019)
REPORT BY A TASK FORCE OR WORKING GROUP
The name of the taskforce is capitalised in the reference because it is
a proper noun.
Reference:
Independent Taskforce on Workplace Health and Safety. (2013). The
report of the Independent
Taskforce on Workplace Health and Safety: He korowai whakaruruhau.
http://hstaskforce.govt.nz/documents/report-of-the-independent-
taskforce-on-workplace-
health-safety.pdf
Citation:
Independent Taskforce on Workplace Health and Safety (2013) state
… OR
(Independent Taskforce on Workplace Health and Safety, 2013)
POLICY OR ISSUE BRIEF
Identify the number of the policy or issue brief in parentheses after
the title.
Reference:
Brown, M. A., Simcock, R., & Greenhaugh, S. (2015). Protecting the
urban forest (Policy brief 13).
Landcare Research.
https://www.landcareresearch.co.nz/__data/assets/pdf_file/0016/10
1446/Policy_Brief_13
_Protecting_urban_forest.pdf
Citation:
Brown et al., (2015) states … OR
… (Brown et al., 2015)
If the number is not provided, identify it as an issue or policy brief in
square brackets.
Reference:
New Zealand Medical Association. (2017). Improving health literacy
[Policy brief].
http://www.nzma.org.nz/__data/assets/pdf_file/0019/56053/Health
-Literacy-Policy-
Briefing-web.pdf
Citation:
According to the New Zealand Medical Association (2017, p. 6) … OR
Medical Association, 2017, p. 6)
SAFETY DATA SHEET
Author or manufacturer name. (Year, Month, Day). Name of substance
[Safety Data Sheet].
https:/xxxxxx
Omit the publishers name if it’s the same as the author/manufacturer.
Reference:
Caltex NZ. (2017, August 2). Diesel [Safety Data Sheet].
https://caltex.co.nz/assets/Uploads/Caltex-
Diesel.pdf
Dentsply Sirona New Zealand. (2018, December 11). 2% Xylocaine
dental with adrenaline
(epinephrine) 1:80,000 injection [New Zealand Data Sheet]. Medsafe.
https://www.medsafe.govt.nz/profs/datasheet/x/XylocaineDentaland
Adrenaline.pdf.

Medsafe. (2018, October 23). Paracetamol (Pharmacy Health), 500 mg,


uncoated tablets [New
Zealand Data Sheet].
https://www.medsafe.govt.nz/profs/datasheet/p/paracetamolpharmac
yhealthtab.pdf
Citation:
Caltex NZ (2017)…
OR … (Caltex NZ, 2017).
Denstply Sirona New Zealand (2018) … OR … (Dentsply Sirona New
Zealand, 2018).
Medsafe (2018) … OR … (Medsafe, 2018).
PAPER PRESENTATION
Reference:
Bodkin-Allen, S., Swain, N., West, S., Pike, G. (2018, October 4-7). It’s
not that bad singing with other
people: The effect of a single Outreach on singing attitudes and
confidence in adults [Paper
presentation]. Waves into the future, 40th Australian New Zealand
Association for Research
in Music Education (ANZARME) Conference, Gold Coast, QLD,
Australia.
Carstensen, C., & Madden, K. (2019, November 18-20). The glasses are
on, implementing augmented
reality and virtual reality from an educator’s perspective [Paper
presentation]. Australasian
Nurse Educators Conference (ANEC), Dunedin, New Zealand.
Citation:
Bodkin-Allen et al. (2018) stated… OR
… (Bodkin-Allen et al., 2018)
Carstensen and Madden (2019) … OR … (Carstensen & Madden, 2019)
P
POSTER PRESENTATION
Reference:
Harding, L., Dobbs, S., & Prinsloo, L. (2018, May 6-9). Ako Te Reo
Māori; Pākehā nurse educators’
experiences as students to appreciate an alternative educational
pedagogy within New
Zealand [Poster presentation]. NETNEP 7th International Nurse
Education Conference,
Banff, Alberta, Canada.
Citation:
Harding et al. (2018) … OR … (Harding et al., 2018)
SYMPOSIUM CONTRIBUTION
Reference:
Fallu, M. (2019, November 4). The leisure and recreation for people
with disabilities in Southland, ten
years on (a longitudinal study). In S. Bodkin-Allen (Chair), SIT-OP
Collaborative Research
[Symposium]. Dunedin, New Zealand.
Citation:
Fallu (2019) … OR … (Fallu, 2019)
CONFERENCE PAPER – PUBLISHED IN A BOOK OR JOURNAL
Use the same format as for a book or book chapter, or for a journal
article.
Reference:
Baker, O., Murphy, A., & Tajveer, N. (2018). Web intelligence in
tourism: User experience design and
recommender system. In E. Erturk (Ed.) Proceedings of the Computing
and Information
Technology Research and Education New Zealand (CITRENZ2018)
Conference, 11-13 July
2018 (pp. 110-113).
https://www.citrenz.ac.nz/conferences/2018/pdf/2018-CITRENZ-
PACIT.pdf
Citation:
Baker et al. (2018) …
OR … (Baker et al., 2018)
UNPUBLISHED DISSERTATION OR THESIS, PRINT/HARDCOPY
FORMAT
Reference:
Knight, A. (2001). Exercise and osteoarthritis [Unpublished master’s
dissertation]. Auckland
University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand.
Citation:
Knight (2001) stated … OR … (Knight, 2018)
DISSERTATION OR THESIS, FROM A DATABASE
Reference:
Pflieger, J. C. (2009). Adolescents' parent and peer relations and
romantic outcomes in young
adulthood (Doctoral dissertation). ProQuest Dissertations and Theses
Global.
Citation:
Pflieger (2009) stated … OR … (Pflieger, 2009)
DISSERTATION OR THESIS, PUBLISHED ONLINE IN AN
INSTITUTIONAL REPOSITORY OR
WEBSITE
Reference:
Thomas, R. (2009). The making of a journalist: The New Zealand way
(Doctoral thesis, Auckland
University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand). Tuwhera Open
Access.
http://hdl.handle.net/10292/466
Citation:
Thomas (2009) stated … OR … (Thomas, 2009)
COMPUTER SOFTWARE AND MOBILE APPS
Common software and mobile apps mentioned in text, but not
paraphrased or quoted, do not need
citations. For example, Microsoft Office (e.g., Word, Excel,
PowerPoint), social media apps (e.g.,
Facebook, Instagram, Twitter), Survey software (E.g., Qualtrics,
Survey Monkey), Abode products
(E.g., Adobe Reader, Photoshop, Adobe Acrobat), Java, and statistical
programs (e.g., R, SPSS, SAS).
If you use common software or mobile apps simply give the proper
name of the software or app
along with the version number in the text, if relevant.
For example:
Students had installed the Facebook app on their mobile devices.
Data were analysed with the IBM SPSS Statistics (Version 25).
Include reference list entries and in-text citations if you have
paraphrased or quoted from any
software or app, or if the mentioning software, apps, and apparatuses
or equipment of limited
distribution – that is, if the reader is unlikely to be familiar with them.
Use the table below to assist with references for software and mobile
apps of limited distribution
and for apparatuses and equipment.
COMPUTER SOFTWARE
Reference:
Esolong, A. N. (2014). Obscure Reference Generator [Computer
software]. E & K Press.
Citation:
Esolong (2014) … OR … (Esolong, 2014)
If the author and publisher are the same, omit the publisher.
Reference:
Rovio Entertainment. (2009). Angry birds [Mobile iSOS].
Citation:
Rovio Entertainment (2009) … OR
… (Rovio Entertainment, 2009)
MOBILE APP
Reference:
Epocrates. (2019). Epocrates medical reference (Version 18.12)
[Mobile app]. App Store.
https://itune.apple.com/us/app/epocrates/id281935788?mt=8
Citation:
Epocrates (2019) stated … OR … (Epocrates, 2019)
FILM OR VIDEO
Reference:
Zanuck, R. D., Brown, D. (Producers), & Spielberg, S. (Director). (1975).
Jaws [Motion picture].
Universal Pictures.
Jackson, P., Osborne, B., & Walsh, F. (Producers), & Jackson, P.
(Director). (2003). The lord of the
rings: The return of the king [Motion picture]. New Line Cinema;
WingNut Films.
Citation:
Zanuck et al. (1975) …
Jackson et al. (2003) …
TELEVISION SERIES
Reference:
Laing, J. (Producer). (2006). Outrageous fortune [Television series].
South Pacific Pictures.
Citation:
Laing (2006) …
OR … (Laing, 2006)
SINGLE EPISODE IN A TELEVISION SERIES OR WEBISODE
Reference:
Egan, D. (Writer), & Alexander, J. (Director). (2005). Failure to
communicate [Television series
episode]. In D. Shore (Executive producer), House. Fox Broadcasting.
Pond, M. (Writer), Silverman, D. (Director). (1989, December 17).
Simpsons roasting on an open fire
(Season 1, Episode 1) [TV Series episode]. In J. L. Brooks, M. Groening,
& S. Simon (Executive
Producers), The Simpsons. Gracie Films; Twentieth Century Fox Film
Corporation.
Citation:
Egan and Alexander (2005) …
OR … (Egan & Alexander, 2005)
Pond et al. (1989) … OR … (Pond et al., 1989)
TED TALK
Reference:
Durán, A. (2019, September). How I use art to tackle plastic pollution
in out oceans [Video]. TED
Talks.
https://www.ted.com/talks/alejandro_duran_how_i_use_art_to_tackl
e_plastic_pollution_in_
our_oceans
Citation:
Durán (2019) …
OR … (Durán, 2019)
87
OR … (Zanuck et al., 1975)
OR … (Jackson
YOUTUBE VIDEO
Reference:
South Carolina ETV. (2014, October 28). Ghost caught on camera at
USS Yorktown [Video file].
YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FYnFKpHWPvs
Citation:
South Carolina ETV (2014) …
OR … (South Carolina ETV, 2014)
MUSIC ALBUM
For classical works, the composer is the author. Note in [
] after the tile the individual or group
who recorded this version. Provide the publication date of this version
and the year of original
composition in ( ) at the end of the reference.
Reference:
Bruckner, A. (1996). Symphony no. 1 [Album recorded by Chicago
Symphony Orchestra]. Decca.
(Original work published 1865-1866).
Citation:
Bruckner (1865-1866/1996) … OR … (Bruckner, 1865-1866/1996)
For all other recordings, the recording artist or group is the
reference.
Reference:
Bowie, D. (2016). Blackstar [Album]. Columbia.
Citation:
Bowie (2016) …
OR … (Bowie, 2016)
SINGLE SONG OR TRACK
Reference:
Beyoncé. (2016). Formation [Song]. On Lemonade. Parkwood; Columbia.
Citation:
Beyoncé (2016) …
OR … (Beyoncé, 2016)
PUBLISHED MUSIC SCORE
Published music scores are referenced like books and book chapters.
PODCAST, AUDIO OR VIDEO
Specify the type of podcast (audio or video) in square brackets. If the
URL of the podcast is unknow,
(e.g., if accessing via an app), omit the URL.
Reference:
Turner, N. (Host). (2019, March 4). Measles in New Zealand [Audio
podcast]. Goodfellows Clinics.
https://tunein.com/podcasts/Science-Podcasts/Goodfellow-Clinics-
p1250741/?topicId=133519780
Citation:
Turner (2019) … OR
… (Turner, 2019)
ARTWORK IN A MUSEUM OR ON A MUSEUM WEBSITE
Use this for all types of museum artwork, including paintings,
sculpture, photographs, prints,
drawings and installations. Always include a description of the medium
or format in square
brackets after the title.
Reference:
Da Vinci, L. (1503-1519). Mona Lisa [Painting]. The Louvre, Paris,
France.
If the art is viewed online, include the URL.
Da Vinci, L. (1503-1519). Mona Lisa [Painting]. The Louvre, Paris,
France.
https://www.louvre.fr/en/oeuvre-notices/mona-lisa-portrait-lisa-
gherardini-wife-
francesco-del-giocondo
Citation:
Da Vinci (1503-1519) … OR
… (Da Vinci, 1503-1519)
PHOTOGRAPH
Creator's Last Name, First Initial. (Year of creation). Title of image or
description of image. [Type of
work]. URL/database.
Reference:
Cohn, R. H. (1978). Conversations with a gorilla [Photograph]. National
Geographic.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/1978/10/conversations
-with-koko-the-
gorilla/
For an untitled photograph, include a description in square brackets in
place of a title.
Tugnoli, L. (2019). [Photograph series of the tragic famine in Yemen
shown through imagines in
which beauty and composure intertwined with devastation]. The
Pulitzer Prizes.
https://www.pulitzer.org/winners/lorenzo-tugnoli-washington-post
Citation:
Cohn (1978) … OR … (Cohn, 1978)
Tugnoli (2019)… OR …(Tugnoli, 2019)
POWERPOINT SLIDES OR LECTURE NOTES
There is no need to reference class lectures or handouts. These are
considered to be part of the
generally known body of knowledge and do not need to be cited in
either your assignment or your
reference list.
The exceptions are: when a lecture handout is ascribed to a particular
source by a tutor, then you
must then reference correctly the original source; when a tutor cites a
particular example in class
that is related to his or her own research, that is specialised and
comes from only the person
concerned. It should be referenced as a presentation (the format is
shown in paper presentation).
Reference:
Housand, B. (2019). Superheroes and the gifted [PowerPoint slides].
Slideshare.
https://www.slideshare.net/brianhousand/superheroes-and-the-gifted
Citation:
Housand (2019) … OR
… (Housand, 2019)
citation (author and year).
Author (year, month day). Title [format]. Website name. https://...
• Include either the author’s last name and initials or the corporate
author name.
• Provide any social medial identity information in square brackets
after the name.
• Provide as specific a date as is available on the webpage. This might
be a year only; a year
and month; or a year, month and day.
• If the date is unknown, use n.d. (for no date) in parentheses, e.g.
(n.d.). If the date is
unknown but can be approximated use “ca.” (for circa) followed by the
approximated year
in square brackets, e.g. [ca. 2017]. If you use either n.d. or ca., you will
need to also include
the date you retrieved the information.
• For the title, put the name of the page or the caption of the post as
the title. If there is no
caption or title on the post, use the first words of the post. Put the
title in italics.
• Put the format after the title in square brackets, e.g. [Instagram
photograph], [Tweet],
[Status update], [@username].
Invercargill City Council. (n.d.). About Invercargill City Council
[Facebook page]. Retrieved
November 29, 2019, from
https://www.facebook.com/pg/InvercargillCityCouncil/about/?
ref=page_internal
Te Papa. (n.d.). Home [Facebook page]. Facebook. Retrieved December
6, 2019, from
https://www.facebook.com/TePapa/
Citation:
Invercargill City Council (n.d.) … OR
Te Papa (n.d.) … OR
… (Invercargill City Council, n.d.)
… (Te Papa, n.d.)

New Zealand Red Cross. (2019, November 27). As the number of


people suspected to have contracted
measles [Status update]. Facebook.
https://www.facebook.com/NewZealandRedCross/posts/27451644988
60631

Smithsonian Magazine. (2016, December 12). Stephen Hawking


congratulates American Ingenuity
Award winners [Video]. Facebook.
https://www.facebook.com/smithsonianmagazine/videos/10154292681
468253/
Citation:
New Zealand Red Cross (2019) … OR … (New Zealand Red Cross, 2019)
Smithsonian Magazine (2016) … OR
… (Smithsonian Magazine, 2016)
INSTAGRAM
Present the name of the individual or group author the same as you
would for any other reference.
Then provide the handle (beginning with the @ sign) in square
brackets, followed by a period.
Provide the first 20 words of the post as the title. Count a URL, a
hashtag or an emoji as one word
each, and include them in the reference if they fall within the first 20
words.
Reference:
University of Canterbury Lib [@uclibrary]. (2018, November 27). UC’s
architectural drawings
declared a national heritage treasure! Housed at the Macmillan Brown
Library, the Armson
Collins Architectural Drawings Collection [Photograph]. Instagram.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BqrJg7Agu75/
University of Canterbury Lib [@uclibrary]. (n.d.). Posts, followers,
following [Profile]. Instagram.
https://www.instagram.com/uclibrary/
Citation:
University of Canterbury Lib (2018) …
University of Canterbury Lib (n.d.) …
OR … (University of Canterbury Lib, 2018)
OR … (University of Canterbury Lib, n.d.)
Or if combined in one citation
University of Canterbury Lib (n.d., 2018) … OR … (University of
Canterbury Lib, n.d., 2018)
INSTAGRAM PHOTO OR VIDEO
Format:
LastName, FirstInitial, MiddleInitial. [@Instagram username]. (Year,
Month Day). Title/Caption of
photo [Instagram photo]. Instagram. URL of post
PageName. [@Instagram username]. (Year, Month Day). Title/Caption
of video [Instagram video].
Instagram. URL of post
Reference:
Fox, M. J. [@realmikejfox]. (2018, June 5). It takes < than a min to
learn how to save a life. Watch the
video at handsonly.nyc #ICanSaveALife with #HandsOnlyCPR
[Instagram photo]. Instagram.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BjppDLDBxRF/
EarthPix. [@earthpix]. (2019, January 8). Snow train ride in Lago
Bianco Switzerland
@yingxingdelia [Instagram video]. Retrieved
from https://www.instagram.com/p/BsY81cZlVLJ/
Citation:
Fox (2018) … OR
… (Fox, 2018)
Earthpix (2019) … OR … (Earthpix, 2019)
INSTAGRAM PROFILE
Format:
LastName, FirstInitial. MiddleInitial. [@Instagram username]. (n.d.).
Posts [Instagram profile].
Retrieved Month Day, Year, from URL of profile
PageName. [@Instagram username]. (n.d.). Posts [Instagram profile].
Retrieved Month Day, Year,
from URL of profile
Provide a retrieval date, because the contents of the page can change
over time.
Reference:
Shapiro Library. [@snhulibrary]. (n.d.). Posts [Instagram profile].
Retrieved January 23, 2019
from https://www.instagram.com/snhulibrary/
Citation:
(Shapiro Library, n.d.) … OR … (Shapirao Library, n.d.)
TWEET
Reference:
Ministry of Health [@minhealthnz]. (2017, April 3). Typhoid [Tweet].
Twitter.
https://twitter.com/aklpublichealth/status/849041745186660357
Trump, D. J. [@realDonaldTrump]. (2017, March 7). I am working on a
new system where there will
be competition in the drug industry [Tweet]. Twitter.
https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/839110000870109184
Citation:
Ministry of health (2017) … OR … (Ministry of Health, 2017)
Trump (2017) …
OR … (Trump, 2017)
ONLINE FORUM POST
Reference:
National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NASA]. (2018,
September 12). I’m NASA astronaut
Scott Tingle. Ask me anything about adjusting to being back on Earth
after my fist spaceflight!
[Online forum post]. Reddit.
https://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/9fagqy/im_nasa_astronau
t_scott_tingle_ask_
me_anything/
Citation:
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (2018) … OR …
(National Aeronautics and
Space Administration, 2018)

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