Monday, March 9, 2020
MLA Style Parenthetical Citations
MLA Style Parenthetical Citations Many high school teachersà require students to use MLA formatà for their papers.à When a teacher requires a certain style, it means they expect you to follow guidelines for formattingà line spacing, margins, and theà title pageà in a specific way. Your teacher may provide a style guide. As you write your paper in MLA format, you will be referencing things you found in your research and will need to indicate exactly where you found the information. As an alternative toà using footnotes (which are common in Chicago format),à this can be done with parenthetical citations. Theseà are briefà notations that explain where you found your facts. Any time you make reference to someone elses idea, either through paraphrasing or quoting them directly, you must provide this notation. It will includeà the authorââ¬â¢s name and the page number from their work. Here is an example of parenthetical citation: Even today, many children are born outside the safety of hospitals (Kasserman 182). This indicates that you are using information found in a book by somebody named Kasserman (last name) and it was found on page 182. You may also give the same information in another way if you want to name the author in your sentence. You might want to do this to add variety to your paper: According to Laura Kasserman, ââ¬Å"many children today do not benefit from the sanitary conditions which are available in modern facilitiesâ⬠(182). Many children are born outside the safety of hospitals. Be sure to use quotation marks when quoting someone directly.
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