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MLA Citation Style
Rio Salado College MLA Style Sheet
http://www.riosalado.edu/services/student/support/library/tutorials/mla_citation.pdf
Brief examples of the basic citation formats.
MLA Style
http://www.rpi.edu/dept/llc/writecenter/web/mla.html
Students taking RSC English 102 course will find this site beneficial. There are quick examples of work cited pages, parenthetical documentation and more.
Organizing a Research Paper and Document it with MLA Citations
http://geocities.com/Athens/Oracle/4184
This web site is written for beginning writers. There are simple instructions for citing the following types of source material: conventional sources, online sources, CD-ROM and CD database materials. Students might appreciate viewing the sample work cited page.
The Columbia Guide to Online Style
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cup/cgos/idx_basic.html
Clear guidelines for citing the World Wide Web, e-mail, discussion lists, newsgroups, electronic publications and online databases. This site is thorough and extensive, offering many examples for both humanities (MLA) and scientific (APA) styles.
Documenting Sources from the World Wide Web
http://www.mla.org/
Modern Language Association of America's summary of guidelines presented in the fourth edition of the "MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers." This site includes how to cite articles, books and poems from personal and professional web sites, journals, magazines, reference databases, and postings to reference databases.
The Purdue University Writing Lab
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/research/r_mla.html
Basic forms used for citing various electronic sources. This is a briefer explanation of MLA guidelines and more easily used by beginning writers.
Writer's Handbook. Citing Electronic Sources - MLA Style
http://www.wisc.edu/writing/Handbook/elecmla.html#top
The University of Wisconsin-Madison Writing Center's Handbook presents an easily followed table index to the different sections of the site.
The Library of Congress - American Memory: Citing Electronic Sources
http://memory.loc.gov/learn/start/cite/index.html
From the Library of Congress "American Memory" project, this research tool gives an illustration of the digitized primary source materials available at the LOC as well as showing how to cite them in MLA Style. Includes film, maps, recorded sound and photographs as well as written documents.
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