How To Harvard Reference
How To Harvard Reference
How To Harvard Reference
In-text citations
You must use in-text citation to provide concise details of the information you are referencing/quoting from. These in-text citations then link to the complete citation provided in your bibliography. In-text citations are brief to enable the flow of the words to continue. Elements of in-text citation An in-text citation has 3 elements 1. Author/editors name. 2. Year of publication. 3. Page number(s) only required if you are directly quoting or using ideas from a specific page. Depending on your sentence structure, these elements can be used in slightly different ways, but you must ensure all appropriate elements are provided. Footnotes and endnotes are not used in Harvard referencing. Examples of in-text citations Some examples of common in-text citations are provided below. For a full list of possible in-text citations including, citing multiple sources, citing a web page or, citing multiple publications by the same source in the same year please see the Cite Them Right publication. In a recent report (Jones, 2010) the use of business processes were reviewed... The whole report is referenced, so no page number is required. Dixon (2007, p.85) explains that the role of women in... The author name is provided in the sentence so is not needed in the citation. A direct quote is referenced so the page number is provided. Recent biological research (Ricks and Wilson, 2009) has shown that... If the reference has up to 3 authors add all to the in-text citation It has been noted in educational research (Cooke et al., 2006, p. 35) that the growth of... If a publication has more than 3 authors cite the 1st name listed followed by et al. All authors should be listed in the bibliography.
Creating a bibliography
In-text citations should link directly with the references provided in your bibliography. A reader should be able to take an in-text citation and locate the exact reference within your bibliography. A Harvard reference is made up of a number of elements. Each of these elements appears in a predefined order in the reference.
Elements of a Harvard reference There are slight differences in reference depending on the type of information being referenced. There are eleven different elements that could be included in a reference. The table below provides a quick reference for the main types of reference. For further details for each of the information types provided below please see the Cite Them Right publication. Issue information
Page number(s)
Title of article/chapter
Book Chapter from book e-book Journal article Electronic Journal Article Internet Site Newspaper article
An example, containing all the relevant elements, of a Harvard reference for a book is provided below.
Date accessed
Year of publication
Title of publication
Place of publication
Publisher
Edition
Author
URL
Book by more than three authors Smith, J., Jones, W., March, M. and Chapman, B. (2004) Harvard citations in easy stages. London: Academic Press. Chapter from an edited book Jones, D. (2004) 'Understanding Harvard referencing', in Brown, P. (ed.) Writing references in extremely easy stages. London: Academic Press, pp. 21-25. e-book Burnapp, D. (2009) Getting ahead as an international student. Dawsonera [Online]. Available at: http://www.dawsonera.com (Accessed: 29 July 2010). Print journal Haddock, M. (1994) Are you thinking of writing a bibliography?, College and Research Libraries News, 55(8), pp. 471-474. Journal article in a database Coughlin, E. (2010) 'High schools at a crossroads', Educational Leadership, 67(7), pp. 48-53, Academic Search Complete [Online]. Available at: http://ebscohost.com (Accessed: 30 July 2010). Government publication Great Britain. Department of Health (2002) Promoting the health of looked after children. London: Department of Health. Web page with an individual author Spillius, E. (2006) Psychoanalysis: then and now. Available at: http://www.melanie-Kleintrust.org.uk (Accessed: 27 January 2009).