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Referencing

This document provides guidelines for referencing sources in assignments, including the need to include at least two references in Assignment A and properly format all references in a bibliography. References should be included in brackets in the text and match full references listed in the bibliography using specified formats for books, websites, and images. A sample bibliography is included as an example of the required reference formatting.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
236 views1 page

Referencing

This document provides guidelines for referencing sources in assignments, including the need to include at least two references in Assignment A and properly format all references in a bibliography. References should be included in brackets in the text and match full references listed in the bibliography using specified formats for books, websites, and images. A sample bibliography is included as an example of the required reference formatting.

Uploaded by

Ilana
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Referencing

Academic referencing (using quotes from or referring to text books, websites or the TEFL Academy online course)
is a requirement for this qualification.

You must include at least two references for Assignment A. (Pictures and The TEFL Academy site are adequate)
All materials you use or refer to should be properly referenced in a bibliography.
The purpose of referencing is a) to avoid plagiarism
b) to give your reader enough information to easily find the original source if they want to.
In your work you should refer to the text in brackets in a way that allows the reader to easily find the full reference in
the bibliography. Eg. (Scrivener, 2014)
In your bibliography use the following formats:
Books: Author (date) title, city, publisher, page no
Example: Jim Scrivener (2014) Teaching English Grammar, Oxford, Macmillan Education, pp 67-8

Websites: Author/Organisation. Date/n.d. Title. Website name, Available at: website address [Accessed: (date you
looked at it)]

Example: Alex Case (March 2008) 15 fun games for the Present Continuous, TEFL.net, Available at:
https://www.tefl.net/elt/ideas/grammar/fun-games-for-present-continuous/ [Accessed 19/08/2018]

'n.d.' stands for 'no date,' use this if no date is given. If the name of the author is not given, just leave it out.

For pictures you need only provide only a description of the picture and a hyper-link to the image, or copy and
paste the URL

Your bibliography should look something like this:


Bibliography

Picture of a lion

Alex Case (March 2008) 15 fun games for the Present Continuous, TEFL.net, Available at:
https://www.tefl.net/elt/ideas/grammar/fun-games-for-present-continuous/ [Accessed 18/12/2018]

Teaching English (15 December, 2010) Phonemic Chart. British Council/BBCAvailable at:
http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/article/phonemic-chart [Accessed 19/12/2018]
Robert Mannell and Felicity Cox (n.d) Phonemic (Broad) Transcription of Australian English. MacQuarie
University Available at:
http://clas.mq.edu.au/speech/phonetics/transcription/phonemic_transcription/phonemic_transcription.
html [Accessed 19/08/2017]
Learn to Speak English Like native speakers! (n.d) American English IPA: The American Spoken English
(ASE) IPA Eslan Available at: http://englishspeaklikenative.com/resources/american-english-ipa/
[Accessed 19/08/2017]
Jim Scrivener (2014) Teaching English Grammar, Oxford, Macmillan Education, pp 67-8
The TEFL Academy, Disappearing Syllables, Unit 2, TEFL Academy.com [Accessed 19/12/2018]
You can use this site to generate references for you, just paste in the website address or title of the book or article.
https://www.citethisforme.com/uk/referencing-generator/harvard

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