Reviewing this page will help you learn how to avoid committing plagiarism. This is important because there are serious consequences to committing plagiarism. See CSUCI's Academic Dishonesty Policy to understand the very real and serious consequences for committing plagiarism.
For help with writing citations, see the WMC’s Citation Resources page and the Library's Citation Guide for explanations, tips, examples, videos, and additional resources.
This page is designed with multiple learning pathways. The same information is covered in each pathway, so simply choose whichever fits your learning style best. You can explore the information two ways:
Image Credit: "Keep Calm and Cite your Sources" from Simon Fraser University licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0
Citations are a way to credit the creator and the work you utilized in your research. These are usually inserted in-text in parentheses, footnotes, or endnotes, and at the end of your paper in a Reference List or Bibliography. Correctly citing your sources is the number one defense against plagiarism.
In your research, you should cite when:
As mentioned above, citations are the number one defense against plagiarism but citations serve many roles, these include:
Citation styles are consistent formats for citing so that researchers can identify and locate the sources you used in your research. The three most common styles are APA, MLA, and the Chicago Manual of Style. Review your class syllabus or assignment directions to see which citation style your professor wants you to use. See the "Further Help" section below for citation style resources.
Image Credit: "When Do You Cite?" from UC San Diego licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0, Robert A. Harris’ The Plagiarism Handbook (2001).