Endnotes: Used in the body of the paper to
credit the original author with ideas, words, and direct quotes. These should be used especially for
information taken directly from any source and for paraphrased
information. Since technically all
information is paraphrased in some respect, please be discrete in your decision
on what to endnote.
Endnotes
General
Book - one author
1Edward
Shorter, The Health Century (New York: Doubleday Inc, 1987) 22.
Book - two
authors
2James
F. Fries and Lawrence M. Crapo, Vitality and Aging (San Francisco: WH
Freeman and Co., 1981) 59.
Reference
book (encyclopedia) - unsigned
3.
ÒPolytheismÓ The New Book Encyclopedia, 1993: 556.
Magazine
Article
4.
Phillip Dewey, ÒAztec SocietyÓ Time 16 Jan. 1995: 57.
Internet
Site
5.
ÒIn the Life Of CortesÓ http://www.history_cortes.edu, 12 March 1997.
Additional
Endnote From Same Reference
6.
Ibid., 24.
Things To Remember...
-
Endnotes have their own page after the text of your paper
-
Always indent the first line if your computer doesnÕt for you
-
If your computer does not endnote, footnotes are fine
-
If your not sure the format of an endnote, look it up - do not guess
Bibliography: Used to give credit to the sources where you
gained information for your research paper. List everything you looked at in this section: books,
encyclopedia, magazines, papers, journals, microfilm, etc.
Bibliography
Book - one author
Bauer, Edward. The
Maya and Their Religion. New
York: University of New York Press, 1996.
Book - two authors
Cook, Robin L., and
Lawrence M. Signor. The
Revolutionary War. San Francisco: WH Freeman Inc., 1998.
Reference book - signed
Diller, Roger. ÒIncasÓ
The New Encyclopedia Britannica, 1993.
Magazine Article
Fallman, Eugene. ÒThe
Life and Times of Teddy Roosevelt.Ó History Journal, 15 March 1995.
Internet Site
ÒIn the Life of Cortes,Ó http://www.history_cortes.edu, 12 March
1997.
Things To Remember...
- Alphabetic order
-
Bibliographies always come after the endnotes
-
Indent from the second line on