Monday, 9 May 2016

Harvard Referencing- FMP

Harvard referencing is a method to cite information sources used in work or projects. There are two types of citing within the Harvard references, one of which is in-text citations and these are directly quoting from a source within the main body of text. The second is reference lists, which are located at the very end of project, that displays full citations for sources used in the whole assignment.

I have decided to do my referencing as a list, this is because I think this keeps the main body text used in my project very tidy and keeps the links to the sources all together and organised.

Below are a few examples of different referencing methods that I created on my Google Drive:

Examples:


Harvard Referencing


‘Find (and keep) a job you love’ M. Phan, Make-up, pg 161,


‘Concealer should be one or two shades lighter than your skin tone’ M. Phan, Make-up, pg 62,


Text Citation


According to Phan (2014, pg 63) “You know what powder is, but what does it do for your face?”


Bibliography

Phan, M. (2014) Make-up. New York: Harmony Books.

Here is my actual Harvard referencing list that I put together on Google Docs, and below is a screenshot of what this looks like:


Referencing is important when carrying out research and is necessary in making the research successful. It is also crucial to the readers, as they need to see how you did your research and where you got the information from.

No comments:

Post a Comment