Check out the Managing Information section on the Academic Skills Kit for guidance on the other aspects of managing your information as you undertake research and writing for assignments.
Explore our useful Referencing Guide for more information on the importance of referencing.
To learn more about how to reference, try our self-enrol Canvas course, Teach yourself Referencing, for guidance on the fundamentals of constructing references.
There are lots of referencing tools that can help you manage and format your citations and references correctly. Here are some examples:
A very useful online tool that lists all the information you need to include in a reference and provides examples of how a reference will look as an in-text citation and in a reference list. See our short video (3:17 min) for how to get started using Cite Them Right online.
Keep an eye out for this symbol on Library Search and Google Scholar. Clicking the button will provide the option for you to copy a reference in a particular style and paste it directly into your reference list. You might need to tidy it up a little bit, but it will save you time over writing them manually.
Reference building tools help you to create a bibliography using the correct referencing style. You can input information manually or use import functions to pull information through from other webpages or documents. As with the citation button above, reference building tools can save you time, but you may still need to check the references are accurate.
If you’re writing a detailed essay, dissertation or thesis, you may like to use a reference management tool such as EndNote, Mendeley or Zotero to help keep all of your references organised. This software allows you to manually add references or import them from Library Search, Google Scholar, or Subject Databases; sort references into groups; attach pdf documents or add notes. You can then use the reference management software while you write to add in-text citations and format your reference list.
The University has a subscription for EndNote which is available in all University clusters and can be downloaded to your own personal device. You’ll find information about how to get started with EndNote on our EndNote Guide.
We also have a self-enrol Canvas course for getting started with EndNote, Teach yourself EndNote.
Remember: whatever tool you use, it’s always a good idea to get to know the conventions of the referencing style your school or lecturer would like you to use so that you can spot mistakes or missing information.
Once you start creating citations and references, you need to consider your reference style. There are hundreds of them out there and each has a slightly different set of rules about how citations and reference lists should appear in your text.
Most Newcastle University students use the Cite Them Right Harvard style, but there is also Vancouver, IEEE, OSCOLA, Chicago, and many more.
Your lecturers will expect you to use one specific style and all your citations and references should conform to that style accurately and consistently: same punctuation, same capitalisation, same everything.
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