Referencing and Plagiarism
What is referencing?
Referencing means acknowledging all the sources (books, articles, websites, reports, images etc) that you have used in writing your assignment. Because this material contains other people’s ideas and research, you need to acknowledge their influence within your own work.
Most faculties at AUT use the APA referencing style
Why bother?
Referencing is an academic requirement. It is unethical (and can be illegal) to pass off the intellectual property of others as your own. This is called plagiarism and is regarded as a very serious offence.
AUT students are required to submit their assignments through Turn-it-in; this is software that checks the work for plagiarised ideas and language.
Learning to reference correctly is your best protection against charges of plagiarism.
APA guides
The first two guides are for quick reference only. Refer to the other guides if you need more detail or explanations. Guides for citing legal material are included below.
- APA Citation style Very brief guide to how to format references in a reference list. Colour coded. (Provided by Long Island University)
- Quick©ite Provides drop down boxes so the user can select the type of document to be referenced. An interactive site, it gives the format plus an example for citations, both in text and in reference lists. (Provided by the University of Auckland)
- APA Overview and Workshop Easy to navigate, the list of APA rules includes examples and discussion. (Provided by the Writing Lab & the OWL at Purdue University)
- Electronic References How to format citations, in text and in reference lists, for electronic media including: online books, annual reports, power point slides, articles with DOIs, podcasts, websites with no dates, etc. (Updated version of section 4.16, 5th edition)
- Referencing Guide Covers how to format citations, in text and in reference lists, for most types of documents. Includes explanations and examples. (Provided by the AUT University Library)
- Te Tari Awhina Referencing Guide Covers how to format citations in text and in reference lists, for most types of documents. Includes both explanations and examples. (Provided by Te Tari Awhina, AUT University)
Word 2007
Use Word 2007 to create reference lists and in text references.
Legal Citation and Style Guides
- Australia and New Zealand legal abbreviations, 2nd ed. (Tip: go to number 6 on the list)
- Cardiff Index to Legal Abbreviations
- Introduction to basic legal citation Cornell University Law School
- Australian Guide to Legal Citation (University of Melbourne)
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Endnote
is a personal reference management software used in New Zealand and internationally.
AUT students and staff can download it for free from the AUT University website. At present we are using Endnote X
Use EndNote to help you with your APA referencing:
- Store, manage and organise your references
- Create bibliographies and reading lists
- Import references directly from Library databases
- Create in-text citations and a list of References as you type.
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