Your Research Companion
For our example, let’s use the article Rethinking Information Literacy once more. By now we know the author’s name to be James W. Marcum, we have the article title (Rethinking Information Literacy) and the journal title (The Library Quarterly), the volume number (72) and issue number (1). We know that the article was published in 2002 and ran on pages 1-26. We also know the DOI, so we simply fill it in:
Marcum, James W. "Rethinking Information Literacy." The Library Quarterly 72, no. 1 (2002): 1-26. https://doi.org/10.1086/603335
Lets use Giddens' Modernity and Self-Identity again here.
Giddens, Anthony. Modernity and Self-Identity: Self and Society in the Late Modern Age. United Kingdom: Polity Press, 1994
[CFS ARTICLE BIBLIOGRAPHY TEMPLATE]
Surname, First name Initial(s) of middle name(s). "Webpage title" Website title. Month Day#, Year. URL
(Note again the usage of punctuation in this template!)
Let's use the webpage on Plato again here.
Meinwald, Constance C. "Plato" Encyclopedia Britannica. May 22, 2020. https://www.brittanica.com/biography/Plato
As with APA Style, in your Bibliography’ (which is the CFS name for what APA 7th calls the ‘Reference List’) you include the full version of all your footnote references, once again in alphabetical order of the author’s surname. As we now start with the surname, Bibliography references are written in a different manner from the ‘full’ footnote reference. Students often make the mistake of copy-pasting their ‘full’ footnote references into their Bibliography. Instead, use the templates below to guide you:
[CFS ARTICLE BIBLIOGRAPHY TEMPLATE]
Surname, First name, Initial(s) of middle name(s). "Title or article." Journal title Volume number, no. Issue number (Year): Page range. DOI
(Note especially the usage of punctuation in this template!)
[CFS ARTICLE BIBLIOGRAPHY TEMPLATE]
Surname, First name Initial(s) of middle name(s). Book title. Publisher country/state: Publisher name, Year
(Note again the usage of punctuation in this template!)