Skip to Main Content

Referencing Guide: Home

Referencing

Referencing correctly is important. Your writing should always include accurate references in order to:

  • acknowledge the sources you have used to establish your arguments and criticisms and inform your ideas
  • enable other people to identify and trace the sources you have used
  • demonstrate the breadth of your reading and research
  • help to avoid charges of plagiarism because it makes clear when you are using someone else's ideas and words.

There are three components to citing references

  1. The Citation. This is the way you acknowledge i.e.cite the source in your text. Depending on the referencing style you are using this may appear as the author name and year in brackets e.g. (Jones 2016) as a number e.g. [1] or as a footnote. (See the 'Other referencing styles' tab for more about styles)
  2. The Reference. This comprises the details of the source that you have cited.
  3. The Reference List or Bibliography. This is a list of the references you have used or consulted and appears at the end of your work.

Guidance and Referencing Styles at Stirling

Cite Them Right logoCite Them Right provides tutorials, examples, videos, articles, blogs, and other guidance on referencing, avoiding plagiarism and related topics e.g. credible sources, note taking, study skills and student issues. It includes the main  styles used at Stirling: Harvard, APA, Chicago, IEEE, OSCOLA.

SLS - Referencing and Avoiding Plagiarism

See the Referencing and avoiding plagiarism module in Canvas for more guidance about plagiarism and help with referencing. This is brought to you by Student Learning Services.

All new students should complete the 'Academic Integrity and Writing' module within your first 4 weeks at university. It is also useful to revisit this module if you are struggling with your writing and referencing or have received feedback on plagiarism.

Referencing Tutorial

If you are new to referencing, or you could benefit from a refresher, Cite Them Right includes an interactive tutorial to help you learn how to reference correctly and avoid plagiarism whatever referencing style you are using.

You will need to create a personal account in order to store your progress in the tutorial.