cite my reference
The majority of courses at BU require you to use the Harvard method of referencing. Law students and Psychology students should follow the separate systems outlined below:
When writing a piece of work, you need to refer in your text to any material you have used that has been written or produced by others. This procedure is called citing or quoting references. Citing materials that you have referred to correctly will enable you to avoid plagiarism.
Creating an APA reference for media requires different information than an article or book reference. Formats and examples for a movie, and TV show episode are linked below:
Movie Reference: See our APA Guide Example
Anyone who writes academic essays, articles or books that contain references.
First, Recite checks that the authors and dates in the body of your work match up with the references at the end. Then Recite tells you where it finds errors.
If, on the other hand, all of her articles were published in the same year, then you would need to add letters to differentiate between them. Let’s say they were all published in 2009. So then it would be (Doe, 2009a), (Doe, 2009b), and (Doe, 2009c). In your reference list you should then add the corresponding letters.
This depends on how you are citing them. If you are citing them in-text more than once, and you are referring to the same source each time, then you can simply reuse that same in-text reference with a single entry on your references page at the end.
References:
http://rasmussen.libanswers.com/faq/32516
http://reciteworks.com/
http://askus.library.wwu.edu/faq/116711
http://library.cod.edu/geography/reference