Footnotes are used to support and give credibility to your arguments, to acknowledge their original source and to substantiate your facts and ideas in your work. It enables you to act in an honest and ethical manner.
To create your references for your footnotes, use the Online Referencing Generator to generate them for both the footnote at the bottom of the page in your essay, the Reference list (the references you cited in your essay) and your Bibliography (all the other information sources you used).
Bibliography
Eastwood, K 2004, Women and girls in the Middle Ages, Crabtree, New York.
Medieval Lords 2014, Medieval Life and Times, accessed 3 May 2015, <http://www.medieval-life-and-times.info/medieval-life/medieval-lords.htm>.
What is in text referencing?
Why do you need to reference?
What are the two types of in-text references?
What is included in a in-text reference?
What is a reference list?
Use the word document below In text reference table to organise and keep track of your in text references.
The included PDF What technological devices are used to detect volcanoes has several in-text reference examples and a Reference List to help you use and understand in-text referencing.
Footnotes include a note (or reference to a source of information) which appears at the foot (bottom) of the page.
The footnoting system requires you to include:
In your essay you indicate a reference by:
Footnoting should be numerical: the first reference is 1, the second is 2 and so on.
There are two ways to acknowledge an information source in your essay:
Direct quotes: written within double quotation marks. Direct quotes must be the exact words of the author/article and their use must be kept to a minimum.
Paraphrasing: summarising an author’s ideas without using their exact words. Concentrate on the author's ideas and not the wording.
Paraphrasing is more commonly used then direct quotes. The former demonstrates your understanding of what you have read.
A way to shorten second or subsequent references you have already used in your footnote references is to use either ibid (same as last entry) or op. cit. (as previously cited).
Examples
1. 2011, The Story of Phosphorus, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, p. 56
2. ibid., p. 63
3. The Costs and Benefits of Industrial Agriculture, Alberni Environmental Coalition, n.d., accessed 3 May 2014, http://portaec.net/library/food/costs_and_benefits_of_industrial.html.
4. Cordell, op. cit., p. 67.
In using the Footnote style of referencing you create your references at the end of each page of your document. If you would rather have your references appear on a separate page at the end of your assignment use Endnote in word instead.
Instead of inserting a Footnote, insert Endnote which will, at the end of your assignment, move your references to your last page.